Mackewn J E, Stirling J, Jeljeli S, Gould S-M, Johnstone R I, Merida I, Pike L C, McGinnity C J, Beck K, Howes O, Hammers A, Marsden P K
King's College London and Guy's and St Thomas' PET Centre, School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, King's College London, London, UK.
Guy's and St. Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
EJNMMI Phys. 2020 May 5;7(1):24. doi: 10.1186/s40658-020-00295-x.
Despite the advent of clinical PET-MR imaging for routine use in 2011 and the development of several methods to address the problem of attenuation correction, some challenges remain. We have identified and investigated several issues that might affect the reliability and accuracy of current attenuation correction methods when these are implemented for clinical and research studies of the brain. These are (1) the accuracy of converting CT Hounsfield units, obtained from an independently acquired CT scan, to 511 keV linear attenuation coefficients; (2) the effect of padding used in the MR head coil; (3) the presence of close-packed hair; (4) the effect of headphones. For each of these, we have examined the effect on reconstructed PET images and evaluated practical mitigating measures.
Our major findings were (1) for both Siemens and GE PET-MR systems, CT data from either a Siemens or a GE PET-CT scanner may be used, provided the conversion to 511 keV μ-map is performed by the PET-MR vendor's own method, as implemented on their PET-CT scanner; (2) the effect of the head coil pads is minimal; (3) the effect of dense hair in the field of view is marked (> 10% error in reconstructed PET images); and (4) using headphones and not including them in the attenuation map causes significant errors in reconstructed PET images, but the risk of scanning without them may be acceptable following sound level measurements.
It is important that the limitations of attenuation correction in PET-MR are considered when designing research and clinical PET-MR protocols in order to enable accurate quantification of brain PET scans. Whilst the effect of pads is not significant, dense hair, the use of headphones and the use of an independently acquired CT-scan can all lead to non-negligible effects on PET quantification. Although seemingly trivial, these effects add complications to setting up protocols for clinical and research PET-MR studies that do not occur with PET-CT. In the absence of more sophisticated PET-MR brain attenuation correction, the effect of all of the issues above can be minimised if the pragmatic approaches presented in this work are followed.
尽管临床PET-MR成像于2011年开始常规应用,并且已经开发出多种方法来解决衰减校正问题,但仍存在一些挑战。我们已经识别并研究了几个在将当前衰减校正方法应用于脑部临床和研究时可能影响其可靠性和准确性的问题。这些问题包括:(1)将独立获取的CT扫描得到的CT亨氏单位转换为511keV线性衰减系数的准确性;(2)MR头部线圈中使用的衬垫的影响;(3)紧密排列的头发的存在;(4)耳机的影响。对于上述每个问题,我们都研究了其对重建PET图像的影响,并评估了实际的缓解措施。
我们的主要发现是:(1)对于西门子和GE的PET-MR系统,只要按照PET-MR供应商在其PET-CT扫描仪上实施的自身方法将CT数据转换为511keVμ图,就可以使用来自西门子或GE PET-CT扫描仪的CT数据;(2)头部线圈衬垫的影响最小;(3)视野中浓密头发的影响显著(重建PET图像中误差>10%);(4)使用耳机但未将其包含在衰减图中会导致重建PET图像出现显著误差,但在进行声级测量后,不使用耳机进行扫描的风险可能是可以接受的。
在设计研究和临床PET-MR方案时,考虑PET-MR中衰减校正的局限性很重要,以便能够对脑部PET扫描进行准确量化。虽然衬垫的影响不显著,但浓密头发、耳机的使用以及独立获取CT扫描的使用都可能对PET定量产生不可忽视的影响。尽管这些影响看似微不足道,但它们给临床和研究PET-MR研究方案的设置增加了PET-CT所没有的复杂性。在没有更复杂的PET-MR脑部衰减校正的情况下,如果遵循本研究中提出的实用方法,可以将上述所有问题的影响降至最低。