Author/Authors :
Gnesin, Silvano Lausanne University Hospital - Lausanne, Switzerland , Ferreira, Paulo Leite Department of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging - Lausanne University Hospital - Lausanne, Switzerland , Malterre, Jerome Department of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging - Lausanne University Hospital - Lausanne, Switzerland , Laub, Priscille Lausanne University Hospital - Lausanne, Switzerland , Prior, John O Department of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging - Lausanne University Hospital - Lausanne, Switzerland , Verdun, Francis R Lausanne University Hospital - Lausanne, Switzerland
Abstract :
Aim. Similar to PET, absolute quantitative imaging is becoming available in commercial SPECT/CT devices. This study’s goal
was to assess quantitative accuracy of activity recovery as a function of image reconstruction parameters and count statistics
in a variety of phantoms. Materials and Methods. We performed quantitative 99mTc-SPECT/CT acquisitions (Siemens Symbia
Intevo, Erlangen, Germany) of a uniform cylindrical, NEMA/IEC, and an anthropomorphic abdominal phantom. Background
activity concentrations tested ranged: 2–80 kBq/mL. SPECT acquisitions used 120 projections (20 s/projection). Reconstructions
were performed with the proprietary iterative conjugate gradient algorithm. NEMA phantom reconstructions were obtained as a
function of the iteration number (range: 4–48). Recovery coefficients, hot contrast, relative lung error (NEMA phantom), and image
noise were assessed. Results. In all cases, absolute activity and activity concentration were measured within 10% of the expected value.
Recovery coefficients and hot contrast in hot inserts did not vary appreciably with count statistics. RC converged at 16 iterations
for insert size > 22 mm. Relative lung errors were comparable to PET levels indicating the efficient integration of attenuation and
scatter corrections with adequate detector modeling. Conclusions. The tested device provided accurate activity recovery within 10%
of correct values; these performances are comparable to current generation PET/CT systems.