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Improved Quantification of MicroPET/CT Imaging Using CT-derived Scaling Factors.

Authors :
Nandi A
Nakano M
Brašić JR
Brinson ZS
Kitzmiller K
Mathur A
Mohamed M
Roberts J
Wong DF
Kuwabara H
Source :
Research square [Res Sq] 2023 Nov 30. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Nov 30.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Purpose: Combined micro-PET/CT scanners are widely employed to investigate models of brain disorders in rodents using PET-based coregistration. We examined if CT-based coregistration could improve estimates of brain dimensions and consequently estimates of nondisplaceable binding potential (BP <subscript>ND</subscript> ) in rodent PET studies.<br />Procedures: PET and CT scans were acquired on 5 female and 5 male CD-1 mice with PET and CT scans were acquired on 5 female and 5 male CD-1 mice with 3-[ <superscript>18</superscript> F]fluoro-5-(2-pyridinylethynyl)benzonitrile ([ <superscript>18</superscript> F]FPEB), a radiotracer for the metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 5 (mGluR5). In the proposed PET/CT (PTCT) approach, the tracer-specific standard volume was dimension-customized to each animal using the scaling factors from CT-to-standard CT coregistration to simplify PET-to-standard PET coregistration (i.e., 3 CT- and 6 PET-derived parameters). For comparison, conventional PET-based coregistration was performed with 9 (PT9) or 12 (PT12) parameters. PET frames were transferred to the standard space by the three approaches (PTCT, PT9, and PT12) to obtain regional time-activity curves (TACs) and BP <subscript>ND</subscript> in 14 standard volumes of interest (VOIs). Lastly, CT images of the animals were transferred to the standard space by CT-based parameters from PTCT and with the scaling factors replaced with those from PET-based PT9 to evaluate agreement of the skull to the standard CT.<br />Results: The PET-based approaches showed various degrees of underestimations of scaling factors in the posterior-anterior-direction compared to PTCT, which resulted in negatively proportional overestimation of radioactivity in the cerebellum (reference region) up to 20%, and proportional, more prominent underestimation of BP <subscript>ND</subscript> in target regions down to -50%. The skulls of individual animals agreed with the standard skull for scaling factors from PTCT but not for the scaling factors from PT9, which suggested inaccuracy of the latter.<br />Conclusions: The results indicated that conventional PET-based coregistration approaches could yield biased estimates of BP <subscript>ND</subscript> due to erroneous estimates of brain dimensions when applied to tracers for which the cerebellum serves as reference region. The proposed PTCT provides evidence of a quantitative improvement over PET-based approaches for brain studies using micro-PET/CT scanners.<br />Competing Interests: Declarations The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2693-5015
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Research square
Accession number :
38077018
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.21203/rs.3.rs-3612275/v1