Title :
Experimental Comparison of Lesion Detectability for Four Fully-3D PET Reconstruction Schemes
Author :
Kadrmas, Dan J. ; Casey, Michael E. ; Black, Noel F. ; Hamill, James J. ; Panin, Vladimir Y. ; Conti, Maurizio
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Radiol., Univ. of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT
fDate :
4/1/2009 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The objective of this work was to evaluate the lesion detection performance of four fully-3D positron emission tomography (PET) reconstruction schemes using experimentally acquired data. A multi-compartment anthropomorphic phantom was set up to mimic whole-body 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) cancer imaging and scanned 12 times in 3D mode, obtaining count levels typical of noisy clinical scans. Eight of the scans had 26 68Ge ldquoshell-lessrdquo lesions (6, 8-, 10-, 12-, 16-mm diameter) placed throughout the phantom with various target:background ratios. This provided lesion-present and lesion-absent datasets with known truth appropriate for evaluating lesion detectability by localization receiver operating characteristic (LROC) methods. Four reconstruction schemes were studied: 1) Fourier rebinning (FORE) followed by 2D attenuation-weighted ordered-subsets expectation-maximization, 2) fully-3D AW-OSEM, 3) fully-3D ordinary-Poisson line-of-response (LOR-)OSEM; and 4) fully-3D LOR-OSEM with an accurate point-spread function (PSF) model. Two forms of LROC analysis were performed. First, a channelized nonprewhitened (CNPW) observer was used to optimize processing parameters (number of iterations, post-reconstruction filter) for the human observer study. Human observers then rated each image and selected the most-likely lesion location. The area under the LROC curve ( A LROC) and the probability of correct localization were used as figures-of-merit. The results of the human observer study found no statistically significant difference between FORE and AW-OSEM3D ( A LROC=0.41 and 0.36, respectively), an increase in lesion detection performance for LOR-OSEM3D ( A LROC=0.45, p=0.076), and additional improvement with the use of the PSF model ( A LROC=0.55, p=0.024). The numerical CNPW observer provided the same rankings among algorithms, but obtained different values of - i>A LROC. These results show improved lesion detection performance for the reconstruction algorithms with more sophisticated statistical and imaging models as compared to the previous-generation algorithms.
Keywords :
cancer; expectation-maximisation algorithm; image reconstruction; medical image processing; phantoms; positron emission tomography; Fourier rebinning; channelized nonprewhitened observer; fully 3D AW-OSEM; fully 3D PET reconstruction; fully 3D ordinary-Poisson line-of-response OSEM; fully-3D LOR-OSEM; lesion detectability; localization receiver operating characteristic; multicompartment anthropomorphic phantom; ordered-subsets expectation-maximization; point-spread function; positron emission tomography; whole-body 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose cancer imaging; Anthropomorphism; Cancer; Humans; Image reconstruction; Imaging phantoms; Lesions; Noise level; Performance analysis; Positron emission tomography; Whole-body PET; Fully-3D PET; lesion detection; localization receiver operating characteristic (LROC); observer study; positron emission tomography (PET); Algorithms; Data Interpretation, Statistical; Humans; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Neoplasms; Observer Variation; Phantoms, Imaging; Positron-Emission Tomography; ROC Curve; Whole Body Imaging;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMI.2008.2006520