Litcius/Paper detail

Assessing the impact of different penalty factors of the Bayesian reconstruction algorithm Q.Clear on in vivo low count kinetic analysis of [11C]PHNO brain PET-MR studies

Daniela Ribeiro, William Hallett, Oliver Howes, Robert A. McCutcheon, Matthew M. Nour, Adriana Tavares

2022EJNMMI Research11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Q.Clear is a Bayesian penalised likelihood (BPL) reconstruction algorithm available on General Electric (GE) Positron Emission Tomography (PET)-Computed Tomography (CT) and PET-Magnetic Resonance (MR) scanners. This algorithm is regulated by a β value which acts as a noise penalisation factor and yields improvements in signal to noise ratio (SNR) in clinical scans, and in contrast recovery and spatial resolution in phantom studies. However, its performance in human brain imaging studies remains to be evaluated in depth. This pilot study aims to investigate the impact of Q.Clear reconstruction methods using different β value versus ordered subset expectation maximization (OSEM) on brain kinetic modelling analysis of low count brain images acquired in the PET-MR. METHODS: ) were obtained for the Substantia Nigra (SN), Striatum (St), Globus Pallidus (GP), Thalamus (Th), Caudate (Cd) and Putamen (Pt), using the MIAKAT™ software. Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), repeatability coefficients (RC), coefficients of variation (CV) and bias from Bland-Altman plots were reported. Statistical analysis was conducted using a 2-way ANOVA model with correction for multiple comparisons. RESULTS: When comparing a standard OSEM reconstruction of 6 iterations/16 subsets and 5 mm filter with Q.Clear with different β values under low counts, the bias and RC were lower for Q.Clear with β100 for the SN (RC = 2.17), Th (RC = 0.08) and GP (RC = 0.22) and with β200 for the St (RC = 0.14), Cd (RC = 0.18)and Pt (RC = 0.10). The p-values in the 2-way ANOVA model corroborate these findings. ICC values obtained for Th, St, GP, Pt and Cd demonstrate good reliability (0.87, 0.99, 0.96, 0.99 and 0.96, respectively). For the SN, ICC values demonstrate poor reliability (0.43). CONCLUSION: F]FDG whole-body studies, demonstrate the lowest bias versus the typical iterative reconstruction method OSEM.

Topics & Concepts

Nuclear medicineGlobus pallidusPutamenPositron emission tomographyMedicineIntraclass correlationAlgorithmMagnetic resonance imagingPhysicsNuclear magnetic resonanceMathematicsStatisticsRadiologyBasal gangliaInternal medicineReproducibilityCentral nervous systemMedical Imaging Techniques and ApplicationsMarkov Chains and Monte Carlo MethodsAdvanced MRI Techniques and Applications