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Assessment of Lesion Detectability in Dynamic Whole-Body PET Imaging Using Compartmental and Patlak Parametric Mapping

Abstract

Purpose Hybrid dynamic imaging allows not only the estimation of whole-body (WB) macroparametric maps but also the estimation of microparameters in the initial bed position targeting the blood pool region containing the pathology owing to the limited axial field of view of PET scanners. In this work, we assessed the capability of multipass WB F-FDG PET parametric imaging in terms of lesion detectability through qualitative and quantitative evaluation of simulation and clinical studies. Methods Simulation studies were conducted by generating data incorporating 3 liver and 3 lung lesions produced by 3 noise levels and 20 noise realizations for each noise level to estimate bias and lesion detection features. The total scan time for the clinical studies of 8 patients addressed for lung and liver lesions staging, including dynamic and static WB imaging, lasted 80 minutes. An in-house-developed MATLAB code was utilized to derive the microparametric and macroparametric maps. We compared lesion detectability and different image-derived PET metrics including the SUVs, Patlak-derived influx rate constant (K) and distribution volume (V) and K, k2, k3, blood volume (bv) microparameters, and K estimated using the generalized linear least square approach. Results In total, 104 lesions were detected, among which 47 were located in the targeted blood pool bed position where all quantitative parameters were calculated, thus enabling comparative analysis across all parameters. The evaluation encompassed visual interpretation performed by an expert nuclear medicine specialist and quantitative analysis. High correlation coefficients were observed between SUVmax and Kimax derived from the generalized linear least square approach, as well as K generated by Patlak graphical analysis. Moreover, 3 contrast-enhanced CT-proven malignant lesions located in the liver and a biopsy-proven malignant liver lesion not visible on static SUV images and Patlak maps were clearly pinpointed on K and k2 maps. Conclusions Our results demonstrate that full compartmental modeling for the region containing the pathology has the potential of providing complementary information and, in some cases, more accurate diagnosis than conventional static SUV imaging, favorably comparing to Patlak graphical analysis.</p

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This paper was published in Proceedings - University of Groningen.

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