Attenuation Correction of Long Axial Field-of-View Positron Emission Tomography Using Synthetic Computed Tomography Derived from the Emission Data: Application to Low-Count Studies and Multiple Tracers

Author:

Montgomery Maria Elkjær1,Andersen Flemming Littrup12ORCID,d’Este Sabrina Honoré1,Overbeck Nanna1,Cramon Per Karkov1ORCID,Law Ian12,Fischer Barbara Malene12,Ladefoged Claes Nøhr13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Physiology and Nuclear Medicine, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, 2100 København, Denmark

2. Department of Clinical Medicine, Copenhagen University, 2200 København, Denmark

3. Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark, 2800 Lyngby, Denmark

Abstract

Recent advancements in PET/CT, including the emergence of long axial field-of-view (LAFOV) PET/CT scanners, have increased PET sensitivity substantially. Consequently, there has been a significant reduction in the required tracer activity, shifting the primary source of patient radiation dose exposure to the attenuation correction (AC) CT scan during PET imaging. This study proposes a parameter-transferred conditional generative adversarial network (PT-cGAN) architecture to generate synthetic CT (sCT) images from non-attenuation corrected (NAC) PET images, with separate networks for [18F]FDG and [15O]H2O tracers. The study includes a total of 1018 subjects (n = 972 [18F]FDG, n = 46 [15O]H2O). Testing was performed on the LAFOV scanner for both datasets. Qualitative analysis found no differences in image quality in 30 out of 36 cases in FDG patients, with minor insignificant differences in the remaining 6 cases. Reduced artifacts due to motion between NAC PET and CT were found. For the selected organs, a mean average error of 0.45% was found for the FDG cohort, and that of 3.12% was found for the H2O cohort. Simulated low-count images were included in testing, which demonstrated good performance down to 45 s scans. These findings show that the AC of total-body PET is feasible across tracers and in low-count studies and might reduce the artifacts due to motion and metal implants.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry

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