External radioactive markers for PET data-driven respiratory gating in positron emission tomography.

Büther F, Ernst I, Hamill J, Eich HT, Schober O, Schäfers M, Schäfers KP

Research article (journal)

Abstract

Respiratory gating is an established approach to overcoming respiration-induced image artefacts in PET. Of special interest in this respect are raw PET data-driven gating methods which do not require additional hardware to acquire respiratory signals during the scan. However, these methods rely heavily on the quality of the acquired PET data (statistical properties, data contrast, etc.). We therefore combined external radioactive markers with data-driven respiratory gating in PET/CT. The feasibility and accuracy of this approach was studied for [F]FDG PET/CT imaging in patients with malignant liver and lung lesions.PET data from 30 patients with abdominal or thoracic [F]FDG-positive lesions (primary tumours or metastases) were included in this prospective study. The patients underwent a 10-min list-mode PET scan with a single bed position following a standard clinical whole-body [F]FDG PET/CT scan. During this scan, one to three radioactive point sources (either Na or F, 50-100 kBq) in a dedicated holder were attached the patient's abdomen. The list mode data acquired were retrospectively analysed for respiratory signals using established data-driven gating approaches and additionally by tracking the motion of the point sources in sinogram space. Gated reconstructions were examined qualitatively, in terms of the amount of respiratory displacement and in respect of changes in local image intensity in the gated images.The presence of the external markers did not affect whole-body PET/CT image quality. Tracking of the markers led to characteristic respiratory curves in all patients. Applying these curves for gated reconstructions resulted in images in which motion was well resolved. Quantitatively, the performance of the external marker-based approach was similar to that of the best intrinsic data-driven methods. Overall, the gain in measured tumour uptake from the nongated to the gated images indicating successful removal of respiratory motion was correlated with the magnitude of the respiratory displacement of the respective tumour lesion, but not with lesion size.Respiratory information can be assessed from list-mode PET/CT through PET data-derived tracking of external radioactive markers. This information can be successfully applied to respiratory gating to reduce motion-related image blurring. In contrast to other previously described PET data-driven approaches, the external marker approach is independent of tumour uptake and thereby applicable even in patients with poor uptake and small tumours.

Details about the publication

JournalEuropean Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging)
Volume40
Issue4
Page range602-614
StatusPublished
Release year2013
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish

Authors from the University of Münster

Büther, Florian
European Institute of Molecular Imaging (EIMI)
Eich, Hans Theodor
Clinic for Radiotherapy
Schäfers, Klaus
European Institute of Molecular Imaging (EIMI)
Schäfers, Michael
European Institute of Molecular Imaging (EIMI)
Schober, Otmar
Clinic for Nuclear Medicine