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Published in: European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging 9/2022

12-03-2022 | Original Article

Abbreviated scan protocols to capture 18F-FDG kinetics for long axial FOV PET scanners

Authors: Varsha Viswanath, Hasan Sari, Austin R. Pantel, Maurizio Conti, Margaret E. Daube-Witherspoon, Clemens Mingels, Ian Alberts, Lars Eriksson, Kuangyu Shi, Axel Rominger, Joel S. Karp

Published in: European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | Issue 9/2022

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Abstract

Purpose

Kinetic parameters from dynamic 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) imaging offer complementary insights to the study of disease compared to static clinical imaging. However, dynamic imaging protocols are cumbersome due to the long acquisition time. Long axial field-of-view (LAFOV) PET scanners (> 70 cm) have two advantages for dynamic imaging over clinical PET scanners with a standard axial field-of-view (SAFOV; 16–30 cm). The large axial coverage enables multi-organ dynamic imaging in a single bed position, and the high sensitivity may enable clinically routine abbreviated dynamic imaging protocols.

Methods

In this work, we studied two abbreviated protocols using data from a 65-min dynamic 18F-FDG scan: (A) dynamic imaging immediately post-injection (p.i.) for variable durations, and (B) dynamic imaging immediately p.i. for variable durations plus a 1-h p.i. (5-min-long) datapoint. Nine cancer patients were imaged on the Biograph Vision Quadra (Siemens Healthineers). Time-activity curves over the lesions (N = 39) were fitted using the Patlak graphical analysis and a 2-tissue-compartment (2C, k4 = 0) model for variable scan durations (5–60 min). Kinetic parameters from the complete dataset served as the reference. Lesions from all cancers were grouped into low, medium, and high flux groups, and bias and precision of Ki (Patlak) and Ki, K1, k2, and k3 (2C) were calculated for each group.

Results

Using only early dynamic data with the 2C (or Patlak) model, accurate quantification of Ki required at least 50 (or 55) min of dynamic data for low flux lesions, at least 30 (or 40) min for medium flux lesions, and at least 15 (or 20) min for high flux lesions to achieve both 10% bias and precision. The addition of the final (5-min) datapoint allowed for accurate quantification of Ki with a bias and precision of 10% using only 10–15 min of early dynamic data for either model.

Conclusion

Dynamic imaging for 10–15 min immediately p.i. followed by a 5-min scan at 1-h p.i can accurately and precisely quantify 18F-FDG on a long axial FOV scanner, potentially allowing for more widespread use of dynamic 18F-FDG imaging.
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Metadata
Title
Abbreviated scan protocols to capture 18F-FDG kinetics for long axial FOV PET scanners
Authors
Varsha Viswanath
Hasan Sari
Austin R. Pantel
Maurizio Conti
Margaret E. Daube-Witherspoon
Clemens Mingels
Ian Alberts
Lars Eriksson
Kuangyu Shi
Axel Rominger
Joel S. Karp
Publication date
12-03-2022
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging / Issue 9/2022
Print ISSN: 1619-7070
Electronic ISSN: 1619-7089
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00259-022-05747-3

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