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Reconstructed spatial resolution and contrast recovery with Bayesian penalized likelihood reconstruction (Q.Clear) for FDG-PET compared to time-of-flight (TOF) with point spread function (PSF).

Authors :
Rogasch, Julian M.
Suleiman, Said
Hofheinz, Frank
Bluemel, Stephanie
Lukas, Mathias
Amthauer, Holger
Furth, Christian
Source :
EJNMMI Physics; 1/10/2020, Vol. 7 Issue 1, p1-14, 14p
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Background: Bayesian penalized likelihood reconstruction for PET (e.g., GE Q.Clear) aims at improving convergence of lesion activity while ensuring sufficient signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). This study evaluated reconstructed spatial resolution, maximum/peak contrast recovery (CRmax/CRpeak) and SNR of Q.Clear compared to time-of-flight (TOF) OSEM with and without point spread function (PSF) modeling. Methods: The NEMA IEC Body phantom was scanned five times (3 min scan duration, 30 min between scans, background, 1.5–3.9 kBq/ml F18) with a GE Discovery MI PET/CT (3-ring detector) with spheres filled with 8-, 4-, or 2-fold the background activity concentration (SBR 8:1, 4:1, 2:1). Reconstruction included Q.Clear (beta, 150/300/450), "PSF+TOF<subscript>4/16</subscript>" (iterations, 4; subsets, 16; in-plane filter, 2.0 mm), "OSEM+TOF<subscript>4/16</subscript>" (identical parameters), "PSF+TOF<subscript>2/17</subscript>" (2 it, 17 ss, 2.0 mm filter), "OSEM+TOF<subscript>2/17</subscript>" (identical), "PSF+TOF<subscript>4/8</subscript>" (4 it, 8 ss, 6.4 mm), and "OSEM+TOF<subscript>2/8</subscript>" (2 it, 8 ss, 6.4 mm). Spatial resolution was derived from 3D sphere activity profiles. RC as (sphere activity concentration [AC]/true AC). SNR as (background mean AC/background AC standard deviation). Results: Spatial resolution of Q.Clear<subscript>150</subscript> was significantly better than all conventional algorithms at SBR 8:1 and 4:1 (Wilcoxon, each p < 0.05). At SBR 4:1 and 2:1, the spatial resolution of Q.Clear<subscript>300/450</subscript> was similar or inferior to PSF+TOF<subscript>4/16</subscript> and OSEM+TOF<subscript>4/16</subscript>. Small sphere CRpeak generally underestimated true AC, and it was similar for Q.Clear<subscript>150/300/450</subscript> as with PSF+TOF<subscript>4/16</subscript> or PSF+TOF<subscript>2/17</subscript> (i.e., relative differences < 10%). Q.Clear provided similar or higher CRpeak as OSEM+TOF<subscript>4/16</subscript> and OSEM+TOF<subscript>2/17</subscript> resulting in a consistently better tradeoff between CRpeak and SNR with Q.Clear. Compared to PSF+TOF<subscript>4/8</subscript>/OSEM+TOF<subscript>2/8</subscript>, Q.Clear<subscript>150/300/450</subscript> showed lower SNR but higher CRpeak. Conclusions: Q.Clear consistently improved reconstructed spatial resolution at high and medium SBR compared to PSF+TOF and OSEM+TOF, but only with beta = 150. However, this is at the cost of inferior SNR with Q.Clear<subscript>150</subscript> compared to Q.Clear<subscript>300/450</subscript> and PSF+TOF<subscript>4/16</subscript>/PSF+TOF<subscript>2/17</subscript> while CRpeak for the small spheres did not improve considerably. This suggests that Q.Clear<subscript>300/450</subscript> may be advantageous for the 3-ring detector configuration because the tradeoff between CR and SNR with Q.Clear<subscript>300/450</subscript> was superior to PSF+TOF<subscript>4/16</subscript>, OSEM+TOF<subscript>4/16</subscript>, and OSEM+TOF<subscript>2/17</subscript>. However, it requires validation by systematic evaluation in patients at different activity and acquisition protocols. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
21977364
Volume :
7
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
EJNMMI Physics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141150883
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40658-020-0270-y