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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Quantitative Accuracy of Clinical 99mTc SPECT/CT Using Ordered-Subset Expectation Maximization with 3-Dimensional Resolution Recovery, Attenuation, and Scatter Correction

TLDR
Current commercially available SPECT/CT technology using OSEM-3D reconstruction, scatter correction, and CT-based attenuation correction allows quantification of 99mTc radioactivity concentration in absolute terms within 3.6% in phantoms and 1.1% in patients with a focus on the bladder.
Abstract
We present a calibration method of a clinical SPECT/CT device for quantitative 99mTc SPECT. We use a commercially available reconstruction package including ordered-subset expectation maximization (OSEM) with depth-dependent 3-dimensional resolution recovery (OSEM-3D), CT-based attenuation correction, and scatter correction. We validated the method in phantom studies and applied it to images from patients injected with 99mTc-diphosponate. Methods: The following 3 steps were performed to derive absolute quantitative values from SPECT reconstructed images. In step 1, we used simulations to characterize the SPECT/CT system and derive emission recovery values for various imaging parameter settings. We simulated spheres of varying diameters and focused on the dependencies of activity estimation errors on structure size and position, pixel size, count density, and reconstruction parameters. In step 2, we cross-calibrated our clinical SPECT/CT system with the well counter using a large cylinder phantom. This step provided the mapping from image counts to kBq/mL. And in step 3, correction factors from steps 1 and 2 were applied to reconstructed images. We used a cylinder phantom with variable-sized spheres for verification of the method. For in vivo validation, SPECT/CT datasets from 16 patients undergoing 99mTc-diphosponate SPECT/CT examinations of the pelvis including the bladder were acquired. The radioactivity concentration in the patients9 urine served as the gold standard. Mean quantitative accuracy and SEs were calculated. Results: In the phantom experiments, the mean accuracy in quantifying radioactivity concentration in absolute terms was within 3.6% (SE, 8.0%), with a 95% confidence interval between −19.4% and +12.2%. In the patient studies, the mean accuracy was within 1.1% (SE, 8.4%), with a 95% confidence interval between −15.4% and +17.5%. Conclusion: Current commercially available SPECT/CT technology using OSEM-3D reconstruction, scatter correction, and CT-based attenuation correction allows quantification of 99mTc radioactivity concentration in absolute terms within 3.6% in phantoms and 1.1% in patients with a focus on the bladder. This opens up the opportunity of SPECT quantitation entering the routine clinical arena. Still, the imprecision caused by unavoidable measurement errors is a dominant factor for absolute quantitation in a clinical setup.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

MIRD Pamphlet No. 24: Guidelines for Quantitative 131I SPECT in Dosimetry Applications

TL;DR: The purpose of this document is to provide guidance on the development of protocols for quantitative 131I SPECT in radionuclide therapy applications that require regional (normal organs, lesions) and 3-dimensional dosimetry.
Journal ArticleDOI

An Evidence-Based Review of Quantitative SPECT Imaging and Potential Clinical Applications

TL;DR: SPECT continues to suffer from poorer photon detection efficiency and spatial resolution than PET; however, it has the benefit in some situations of longer radionuclide half-lives, which may better suit the biologic process under examination, as well as the ability to perform multitracer studies using pulse height spectroscopy to separate different radiolabels.
Journal ArticleDOI

MIRD Pamphlet No. 23: Quantitative SPECT for Patient-Specific 3-Dimensional Dosimetry in Internal Radionuclide Therapy

TL;DR: An overview of 3-dimensional SPECT methods and requirements for internal dosimetry at both regional and voxel levels is presented, and Combined SPECT/CT image-based methods are emphasized, because the CT-derived anatomic information allows one to address multiple technical factors that affect SPECT quantification while facilitating the patient-specific voxels-level dosimetric calculation itself.
Journal ArticleDOI

MIRD Pamphlet No. 26: Joint EANM/MIRD Guidelines for Quantitative 177Lu SPECT applied for Dosimetry of Radiopharmaceutical Therapy.

TL;DR: This paper focuses on 177Lu (lutetium) and its application in radiopharmaceutical therapy and is the next in a series of isotope-specific guidelines and recommendations that follow the general information provided in MIRD 23.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Maximum Likelihood Reconstruction for Emission Tomography

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a more accurate general mathematical model for ET where an unknown emission density generates, and is to be reconstructed from, the number of counts n*(d) in each of D detector units d. Within the model, they gave an algorithm for determining an estimate? of? which maximizes the probability p(n*|?) of observing the actual detector count data n* over all possible densities?.
Journal ArticleDOI

Accelerated image reconstruction using ordered subsets of projection data

TL;DR: Ordered subsets EM (OS-EM) provides a restoration imposing a natural positivity condition and with close links to the EM algorithm, applicable in both single photon (SPECT) and positron emission tomography (PET).
Journal ArticleDOI

Maximum likelihood reconstruction for emission tomography

TL;DR: A more accurate general mathematical model where an unknown emission density ¿ = x, y, z generates, and is to be reconstructed from, the number of counts n*(d) in each of D detector units d is given.
Journal ArticleDOI

A practical method for position-dependent Compton-scatter correction in single photon emission CT

TL;DR: For three different activity distributions in cylinder phantoms, simulation tests gave good agreement between the activity distributions reconstructed from unscattered photons and those from the corrected data.
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