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The impact of deep-inspiration breath-hold total-body PET/CT imaging on thoracic 18F-FDG avid lesions compared with free-breathing.

Authors :
Cui, Yingpu
Jia, Jin
Yan, Qianqian
He, Xiaoxiao
Yuan, Keqing
Li, Zhijian
Zhang, Weiguang
Wu, Runze
Zhao, Yumo
Tang, Si
Fan, Wei
Hu, Yingying
Source :
European Journal of Radiology. Aug2024, Vol. 177, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

To investigate PET/CT registration and quantification accuracy of thoracic lesions of a single 30-second deep-inspiration breath-hold (DIBH) technique with a total-body PET (TB-PET) scanner, and compared with free-breathing (FB) PET/CT. 137 of the 145 prospectively enrolled patients finished a routine FB-300 s PET/CT exam and a 30-second DIBH TB-PET with chest to pelvis low dose CT. The total-body FB-300 s, FB-30 s, and DIBH-30 s PET images were reconstructed. Quantitative assessment (SUV max and SUV mean of lung and other organs), PET/CT registration assessment and lesion analysis (SUV max , SUV peak , SUV mean and tumor-background ratio) were compared with Wilcoxon signed-rank tests. The SUV max and SUV mean of the lung with DIBH-30 s were significantly lower than those with FB. The distances of the liver dome between PET and CT were significantly smaller with DIBH-30 s than with FB. 195 assessable lesions in 106 patients were included, and the detection sensitivity was 97.9 % and 99.0 % in FB-300 s, and DIBH-30 s, respectively. For both small co-identified lesions (n = 86) and larger co-identified lesions with a diameter ≥ 1 cm (n = 91), the lesion SUVs were significantly greater with DIBH-30 s than with FB-300 s. Regarding lesion location, the differences of the SUVs for the lesions in the lower thorax area (n = 97, p < 0.001) were significant between DIBH-30 s and FB-300 s, while these differences were not statistically significant in the upper thorax (n = 80, p > 0.05). The lesion tumor-to-surrounding-background ratio (TsBR) was significantly increased, both in the upper and lower thorax. The TB DIBH PET/CT technique is feasible in clinical practice. It reduces the background lung uptake and achieves better registration and lesion quantification, especially in the lower thorax. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0720048X
Volume :
177
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Journal of Radiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178537503
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejrad.2024.111549