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    Optimisation of the air fraction correction for lung PET/CT: addressing resolution mismatch

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    Authors
    Leek, F.
    Anderson, C.
    Robinson, Andrew P
    Moss, R. M.
    Porter, J. C.
    Garthwaite, H. S.
    Groves, A. M.
    Hutton, B. F.
    Thielemans, K.
    Affiliation
    The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK.
    Issue Date
    2023
    
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    Abstract
    BACKGROUND: Increased pulmonary [Formula: see text]F-FDG metabolism in patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis, and other forms of diffuse parenchymal lung disease, can predict measurements of health and lung physiology. To improve PET quantification, voxel-wise air fractions (AF) determined from CT can be used to correct for variable air content in lung PET/CT. However, resolution mismatches between PET and CT can cause artefacts in the AF-corrected image. METHODS: Three methodologies for determining the optimal kernel to smooth the CT are compared with noiseless simulations and non-TOF MLEM reconstructions of a patient-realistic digital phantom: (i) the point source insertion-and-subtraction method, [Formula: see text]; (ii) AF-correcting with varyingly smoothed CT to achieve the lowest RMSE with respect to the ground truth (GT) AF-corrected volume of interest (VOI), [Formula: see text]; iii) smoothing the GT image to match the reconstruction within the VOI, [Formula: see text]. The methods were evaluated both using VOI-specific kernels, and a single global kernel optimised for the six VOIs combined. Furthermore, [Formula: see text] was implemented on thorax phantom data measured on two clinical PET/CT scanners with various reconstruction protocols. RESULTS: The simulations demonstrated that at [Formula: see text] iterations (200 i), the kernel width was dependent on iteration number and VOI position in the lung. The [Formula: see text] method estimated a lower, more uniform, kernel width in all parts of the lung investigated. However, all three methods resulted in approximately equivalent AF-corrected VOI RMSEs (<10%) at [Formula: see text]200i. The insensitivity of AF-corrected quantification to kernel width suggests that a single global kernel could be used. For all three methodologies, the computed global kernel resulted in an AF-corrected lung RMSE <10%  at [Formula: see text]200i, while larger lung RMSEs were observed for the VOI-specific kernels. The global kernel approach was then employed with the [Formula: see text] method on measured data. The optimally smoothed GT emission matched the reconstructed image well, both within the VOI and the lung background. VOI RMSE was <10%, pre-AFC, for all reconstructions investigated. CONCLUSIONS: Simulations for non-TOF PET indicated that around 200i were needed to approach image resolution stability in the lung. In addition, at this iteration number, a single global kernel, determined from several VOIs, for AFC, performed well over the whole lung. The [Formula: see text] method has the potential to be used to determine the kernel for AFC from scans of phantoms on clinical scanners.
    Citation
    Leek F, Anderson C, Robinson AP, Moss RM, Porter JC, Garthwaite HS, et al. Optimisation of the air fraction correction for lung PET/CT: addressing resolution mismatch. EJNMMI physics. 2023 Dec 5;10(1):77. PubMed PMID: 38049611. Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC10695904. Epub 2023/12/05. eng.
    Journal
    EJNMMI Physics
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10541/626816
    DOI
    10.1186/s40658-023-00595-y
    PubMed ID
    38049611
    Additional Links
    https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40658-023-00595-y
    Type
    Article
    Language
    en
    ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
    10.1186/s40658-023-00595-y
    Scopus Count
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