scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal Article

Performance of Philips Gemini TF PET/CT Scanner with Special Consideration for Its Time-of-Flight Imaging Capabilities

TLDR
The Gemini TF whole-body scanner represents the first commercially available fully 3-dimensional PET scanner that achieves time-of-flight capability as well as conventional imaging capabilities.
Abstract
Results from a new PET/CT scanner using lutetium-yttrium oxyorthosilicate (LYSO) crystals for the PET component are presented. This scanner, which operates in a fully 3-dimensional mode, has a diameter of 90 cm and an axial field of view of 18 cm. It uses 4 × 4 × 22 mm3 LYSO crystals arranged in a pixelated Anger-logic detector design. This scanner was designed to perform as a high-performance conventional PET scanner as well as provide good timing resolution to operate as a time-of-flight (TOF) PET scanner. Methods: Performance measurements on the scanner were made using the National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) NU2-2001 procedures to benchmark its conventional imaging capabilities. The scatter fraction and noise equivalent count (NEC) measurements with the NEMA cylinder (20-cm diameter) were repeated for 2 larger cylinders (27-cm and 35-cm diameter), which better represent average and heavy patients. New measurements were designed to characterize its intrinsic timing resolution capability, which defines its TOF performance. Additional measurements to study the impact of pulse pileup at high counting rates on timing, as well as energy and spatial, resolution were also performed. Finally, to characterize the effect of TOF reconstruction on lesion contrast and noise, the standard NEMA/International Electrotechnical Commission torso phantom as well as a large 35-cm-diameter phantom with both hot and cold spheres were imaged for varying scan times. Results: The transverse and axial resolution near the center is 4.8 mm. The absolute sensitivity of this scanner measured with a 70-cm-long line source is 6.6 cps/kBq, whereas scatter fraction is 27% measured with a 70-cm-long line source in a 20-cm-diameter cylinder. For the same line source cylinder, the peak NEC rate is measured to be 125 kcps at an activity concentration of 17.4 kBq/mL (0.47 μCi/mL). The 2 larger cylinders showed a decrease in the peak NEC due to increased attenuation, scatter, and random coincidences, and the peak occurs at lower activity concentrations. The system coincidence timing resolution was measured to be 585 ps. The timing resolution changes as a function of the singles rate due to pulse pileup and could impact TOF image reconstruction. Image-quality measurements with the torso phantom show that very high quality images can be obtained with short scan times (1–2 min per bed position). However, the benefit of TOF is more apparent with the large 35-cm-diameter phantom, where small spheres are detectable only with TOF information for short scan times. Conclusion: The Gemini TF whole-body scanner represents the first commercially available fully 3-dimensional PET scanner that achieves TOF capability as well as conventional imaging capabilities. The timing resolution is also stable over a long duration, indicating the practicality of this device. Excellent image quality is achieved for whole-body studies in 10–30 min, depending on patient size. The most significant improvement with TOF is seen for the heaviest patients.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

PET versus SPECT: strengths, limitations and challenges

TL;DR: This paper intends to balance the capabilities of the two major molecular imaging modalities used in nuclear medicine, namely positron emission tomography and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT).
Journal ArticleDOI

New Technologies for Human Cancer Imaging

TL;DR: The physics and chemistry of cancer imaging is analyzed and the fundamental principles underlying the detection of malignant cells within a background of normal cells are highlighted.
Journal ArticleDOI

Benefit of Time-of-Flight in PET: Experimental and Clinical Results

TL;DR: ToF leads to a better contrast-versus-noise trade-off than non-TOF but one that is difficult to quantify in terms of a simple sensitivity gain improvement.
Journal ArticleDOI

Physical and clinical performance of the mCT time-of-flight PET/CT scanner

TL;DR: The physical and clinical PET performance of the first Biograph mCT TOF PET/CT scanner (Siemens Medical Solutions USA, Inc.) in comparison with its predecessor, the Biograph TruePoint TrueV, is characterized and improvements with TOF are defined.
Journal ArticleDOI

A gradient-based method for segmenting FDG-PET images: methodology and validation

TL;DR: The gradient-based segmentation method applied on denoised and deblurred FDG-PET images proved to be more accurate than the source-to-background ratio method.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

A row-action alternative to the EM algorithm for maximizing likelihood in emission tomography

J. Browne, +1 more
TL;DR: The authors present a row-action maximum likelihood algorithm (RAMLA) as an alternative to the EM algorithm for maximizing the Poisson likelihood in ECT and show that their modification converges to a ML solution whereas the standard OS-EM does not.
Journal Article

Treatment of Axial Data in Three-Dimensional PET

TL;DR: Two methods of treating the axial information from a volume PET scanner are presented and Qualitative and quantitative errors introduced by the approximations are examined for simulated objects with sharp boundaries and for a more anatomically realistic distribution with smooth activity gradients.
Journal Article

Time-of-Flight Positron Emission Tomography: Status Relative to Conventional PET

TL;DR: At present, due to lack of availability of small and highly efficient, crystal-phototube detectors, TOFPET does not have the high spatial resolution capabilities of non-TOFPET.
Journal ArticleDOI

Image Reconstruction and Noise Evaluation in Photon Time-of-Flight Assisted Positron Emission Tomography

TL;DR: In this article, a reconstruction algorithm for TOF-positron computed tomography (PCT) based on the back-projection with 1-dimensional weight and 2-dimensional filtering is presented.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation of time-of-flight benefit for fully 3-DPET

TL;DR: The results show that scan times can be reduced in a time-of-flight (TOF) fully three-dimensional whole-body positron emission tomography (PET) scanner to achieve images similar to those from a non-TOF scanner, or improved image quality achieved for same scan times.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
What is the temporal resolution of Philips Incesive CT?

The temporal resolution of the Philips Gemini TF PET/CT scanner is 585 ps, indicating stable timing performance crucial for time-of-flight (TOF) imaging capabilities in PET scans.