DocumentCode
1829893
Title
Enhanced dynamic FDG-PET tumor detection with constrained temporal filtering
Author
Chen, J. ; Yu, X. ; Tohme, M. ; Park, R.
Author_Institution
Dept. of Electr. Eng., Univ. of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA
Volume
4
fYear
2003
fDate
19-25 Oct. 2003
Firstpage
2604
Abstract
Residual FDG activity in normal tissues, such as blood vessels and the liver, as well as the spilled in background activity can impair the detection of small or modestly tracer-avid tumors in FDG-PET cancer imaging. In order to maximize tumor visualization but minimize background and artifacts, an efficient new method, adapted from the constrained temporal filtering processing widely used for signal detection, is extended to the application of dynamic FDG-PET processing. Comparing with the well-known Patlak analysis and spectral analysis (SA), the proposed method can objectively remove the partial volume effect superimposed onto the TAC as well as the residual blood activities and result in the pixel-by-pixel estimations of the influx constant as the output of the filter. Since the constrained temporal filter is designed to preserve the power of tumor signal, therefore, it is likely to offer a desirable noise canceling result, while make no or minimum distortion on tumor signatures. In contrast, Patlak analysis may fail to classify tumor and normal structures when the tumor is severely interfered by background activity. In this case the tumor present approximately similar time activity curve as that of normal tissue at the later stage of acquisition. The signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and the contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) are served as the figure of merit for performance evaluation. Our digital phantom study demonstrates that the proposed method outperforms Patlak and SA methods. With microPET two mouse studies are also dynamically acquired on the 6th day and the 12th day, respectively, after the cancer cell implantation. The proposed method is applied to process the earlier acquired images and the resulting findings are confirmed with the later acquisitions. The results show that the new method can enhance the tumor-to-background ratio at an early stage and is promising for improving lesion detectability.
Keywords
blood vessels; cancer; filtering theory; noise; phantoms; positron emission tomography; tumours; FDG-PET cancer imaging; Patlak analysis; blood vessels; cancer cell implantation; constrained temporal filtering; contrast-to-noise ratio; digital phantom study; enhanced dynamic FDG-PET tumor detection; influx constant; lesion detectability; liver; microPET; partial volume effect; pixel-by-pixel estimations; residual FDG activity; residual blood activities; signal detection; signal-to-noise ratio; spectral analysis; temporal filtering processing; tracer-avid tumors; tumor signal; tumor visualization; tumor-to-background ratio; Biomedical imaging; Blood vessels; Cancer detection; Filtering; Filters; Liver neoplasms; Signal detection; Spectral analysis; Tumors; Visualization;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2003 IEEE
ISSN
1082-3654
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8257-9
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NSSMIC.2003.1352423
Filename
1352423
Link To Document