Qualitative and quantitative comparison between images obtained with filtered back projection and iterative reconstruction in prostate cancer lesions of (18)F-FDG PET Journal Article


Authors: Etchebehere, E. C. S. C.; Macapinlac, H. A.; Gonen, M.; Humm, J.; Yeung, H. W. D.; Akhurst, T.; Scher, H. I.; Larson, S. M.
Article Title: Qualitative and quantitative comparison between images obtained with filtered back projection and iterative reconstruction in prostate cancer lesions of (18)F-FDG PET
Abstract: Background. Recently, iterative reconstruction with segmented attenuation corrections (IRSAC) has been introduced for reconstruction of F-18-FDG PET images. IRSAC produces images that are more pleasing to the eye, but qualitative and quantitative comparisons between IRSAC and filtered back projection (FBP) have not been reported for metastatic cancer. Since quantitative data has been widely used as an adjunct to interpretation of PET scans, comparison between IRSAC and FBP is needed. The purpose of this study was to compare image quality and the maximum standardized uptake value (SUVmax) obtained with FBP and with IRSAC in metastatic lesions from prostate cancer. Methods. Twenty F-18-FDG PET scans (10 baseline and 10 follow-up) were performed in 10 patients with prostate cancer (ages 66-85 yrs, mean 73.6 yrs). Acquisition began 45 min after injection of 370 MBq of F-18-FDG. Images were reconstructed using FBP and IRSAC, and submitted to visual and quantitative analysis. SUVmax was obtained for all metastases, on FBP and IRSAC. A Jaszczak phantom study was also performed. Results. IRSAC images showed better image quality than FBP especially in regions of high activity concentrations. URSAC detected 106 lesions on both baseline and follow-up scans, while FBP detected 100 and 95 lesions on baseline and follow-up scans, respectively. Therefore, 17 more lesions were seen on IRSAC. The mean SUVmax values on baseline scans for FBP and IRSAC were systematically different, at 4.46 +/- 1.99 and 5.13 +/- 2.67, respectively. On follow-up scans values were 3.89 +/- 1.72 for FBP and 4.29 +/- 1.93 for URSAC. Comparison of FBP with IRSAC on baseline and follow-up scans were statistically significant (baseline: paired "t"-test p=0.0017; follow-up: paired "t"-test p=0.0008). Phantom studies reveal that these differences can be explained by the type of reconstruction filters used, and IRSAC was more accurate than FBP. Conclusions, IRSAC detects smaller volumes in phantoms, patient images are easier to interpret and more metastatic lesions were detected, In addition, IRSAC provides reproducible quantitative data, comparable to data provided by FBP. URSAC SIN and FBP SUV are in close agreement but there was a statistically significant difference between the two, and therefore threshold values of SUV will probably need to be re-determined with MAC, and are likely to be 10 to 19% higher than currently reported.
Keywords: positron emission tomography; radionuclide imaging; tomography, emission computed; fludeoxyglucose f18; prostatic neoplasms,
Journal Title: Quarterly Journal of Nuclear Medicine
Volume: 46
Issue: 2
ISSN: 1125-0135
Publisher: Edizioni Minerva Medica  
Date Published: 2002-06-01
Start Page: 122
End Page: 130
Language: English
ACCESSION: WOS:000178588900005
PROVIDER: wos
PUBMED: 12114875
Notes: Review -- Source: Wos
Citation Impact
MSK Authors
  1. Henry W D Yeung
    126 Yeung
  2. Mithat Gonen
    1028 Gonen
  3. Timothy J Akhurst
    139 Akhurst
  4. John Laurence Humm
    433 Humm
  5. Steven M Larson
    958 Larson
  6. Howard Scher
    1130 Scher