Tran-Gia Johannes, Schlögl Susanne, Lassmann Michael
Department of Nuclear Medicine, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany
Department of Nuclear Medicine, University of Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
J Nucl Med. 2016 Dec;57(12):1998-2005. doi: 10.2967/jnumed.116.178046. Epub 2016 Jul 21.
Currently, the validation of multimodal quantitative imaging and absorbed dose measurements is impeded by the lack of suitable, commercially available anthropomorphic phantoms of variable sizes and shapes. To demonstrate the potential of 3-dimensional (3D) printing techniques for quantitative SPECT/CT imaging, a set of kidney dosimetry phantoms and their spherical counterparts was designed and manufactured with a fused-deposition-modeling 3D printer. Nuclide-dependent SPECT/CT calibration factors were determined to assess the accuracy of quantitative imaging for internal renal dosimetry.
A set of 4 single-compartment kidney phantoms with filling volumes between 8 and 123 mL was designed on the basis of the outer kidney dimensions provided by MIRD pamphlet 19. After the phantoms had been printed, SPECT/CT acquisitions of 3 radionuclides (Tc, Lu, and I) were obtained and calibration constants determined for each radionuclide-volume combination. A set of additionally manufactured spheres matching the kidney volumes was also examined to assess the influence of phantom shape and size on the calibration constants.
A set of refillable, waterproof, and chemically stable kidneys and spheres was successfully manufactured. Average calibration factors for Tc, Lu, and I were obtained in a large source measured in air. For the largest phantom (122.9 mL), the volumes of interest had to be enlarged by 1.2 mm for Tc, 2.5 mm for Lu, and 4.9 mm for I in all directions to obtain calibration factors comparable to the reference. Although partial-volume effects were observed for decreasing phantom volumes (percentage difference of up to 9.8% for the smallest volume [8.6 mL]), the difference between corresponding sphere-kidney pairs was small (<1.1% for all volumes).
3D printing is a promising prototyping technique for geometry-specific calibration of SPECT/CT systems. Although the underlying radionuclide and the related collimator have a major influence on the calibration, no relevant differences between kidney-shaped and spherically shaped uniform-activity phantoms were observed. With comparably low costs and submillimeter resolution, 3D printing techniques hold the potential for manufacturing individualized anthropomorphic phantoms in many clinical applications in nuclear medicine.
目前,由于缺乏合适的、可商购的不同尺寸和形状的人体模型,多模态定量成像和吸收剂量测量的验证受到阻碍。为了证明三维(3D)打印技术在定量SPECT/CT成像中的潜力,使用熔融沉积建模3D打印机设计并制造了一组肾脏剂量学模型及其球形对应物。确定了依赖于核素的SPECT/CT校准因子,以评估内部肾脏剂量学定量成像的准确性。
根据MIRD手册19提供的肾脏外部尺寸,设计了一组4个单腔肾脏模型,填充体积在8至123 mL之间。模型打印完成后,对3种放射性核素(锝、镥和碘)进行SPECT/CT采集,并确定每种放射性核素-体积组合的校准常数。还检查了一组额外制造的与肾脏体积匹配的球体,以评估模型形状和尺寸对校准常数的影响。
成功制造了一组可重新填充、防水且化学稳定的肾脏和球体。在空气中测量的大源中获得了锝、镥和碘的平均校准因子。对于最大的模型(122.9 mL),为了获得与参考值相当的校准因子,感兴趣体积在所有方向上对于锝要扩大1.2 mm,对于镥要扩大2.5 mm,对于碘要扩大4.9 mm。尽管随着模型体积减小观察到了部分容积效应(最小体积[8.6 mL]时差异百分比高达9.8%),但相应球体-肾脏对之间的差异很小(所有体积均<1.1%)。
3D打印是一种很有前景的用于SPECT/CT系统几何特异性校准的原型制作技术。尽管基础放射性核素和相关准直器对校准有重大影响,但在肾脏形状和球形均匀活性模型之间未观察到相关差异。由于成本相对较低且分辨率达到亚毫米级,3D打印技术在核医学的许多临床应用中具有制造个性化人体模型的潜力。