DocumentCode :
1755657
Title :
Evaluation of an Atlas-Based PET Head Attenuation Correction Using PET/CT & MR Patient Data
Author :
Wollenweber, S.D. ; Ambwani, Sonal ; Delso, G. ; Lonn, A.H.R. ; Mullick, Rakesh ; Wiesinger, Florian ; Piti, Z. ; Tari, Abdelkamel ; Novak, G. ; Fidrich, M.
Author_Institution :
GE Healthcare, Waukesha, WI, USA
Volume :
60
Issue :
5
fYear :
2013
fDate :
Oct. 2013
Firstpage :
3383
Lastpage :
3390
Abstract :
The goal of this study was to compare MR-based PET patient attenuation correction (AC) to CT-based AC in the head using clinical whole-body FDG-PET patient data obtained from a tri-modality PET/CT & MR setup. The MR-based AC utilizes an atlas-based approach, registering the patient´s MR images to a CT-based atlas, producing `pseudoCT´ images. Thirteen clinical whole-body FDG patients were included in this study. PET mean activity concentration values were measured and compared in six ~ 15 ml volumes-of-interest throughout the brain tissue. The AC methods compared to CT-based AC were segmentation of the CT (air, fat, soft tissue) and atlas-based MR-AC. Results: PET activity concentration was systematically under-estimated on average by 1.32 kBq/ml (4.9%) when using the segmented CT-based AC, mainly due to lack of attenuation correction for skull bone. Using the atlas-based method, the error was reduced to 0.03 kBq/ml (0.2%) on average. PET image visualization demonstrated spatial variations in activity concentration accuracy induced by the AC methods that were consistent with the approximations in each method. Conclusion: The results demonstrate that the atlas-based AC in the head provides adequate PET quantitation and image quality as compared to methods that do not account for bone.
Keywords :
biomedical MRI; bone; brain; computerised tomography; image segmentation; medical image processing; positron emission tomography; CT segmentation; MR patient data; PET mean activity concentration; PET-CT patient data; atlas based PET head attenuation correction; brain; pseudoCT images; skull bone; whole body FDG patients; Attenuation; Bones; Brain; Computed tomography; Head; Positron emission tomography; Data analysis; image analysis; magnetic resonance imaging; positron emission tomography; reconstruction algorithms;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9499
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2013.2273417
Filename :
6583257
Link To Document :
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