Feasibility of PET-enabled dual-energy CT imaging: First physical phantom and initial patient study results.

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Tác giả: Yasser G Abdelhafez, Ramsey D Badawi, Reimund Bayerlein, Simon R Cherry, Edwin K Leung, Siqi Li, Negar Omidvari, Jinyi Qi, Benjamin A Spencer, Guobao Wang, Zhaoheng Xie, Yansong Zhu

Ngôn ngữ: eng

Ký hiệu phân loại:

Thông tin xuất bản: Germany : European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging , 2025

Mô tả vật lý:

Bộ sưu tập: NCBI

ID: 720006

 PURPOSE: Dual-energy (DE) CT enables material decomposition by using two different x-ray energies and may be combined with PET for improved multimodality imaging. However, this increases radiation dose and may require a hardware upgrade due to the added second x-ray CT scan. The recently proposed PET-enabled DECT method allows dual-energy imaging using a conventional PET/CT scanner without the need to change scanner hardware or increase radiation exposure. Here we demonstrate the first-time physical phantom and patient data evaluation of this method. METHODS: The PET-enabled DECT method reconstructs a gamma-ray CT (gCT) image at 511 keV from the time-of-flight PET data with the maximum-likelihood attenuation and activity (MLAA) approach and then combines this image with the low-energy x-ray CT images to form a dual-energy image pair for material decomposition. To improve the image quality of gCT, a kernel MLAA method was developed using the x-ray CT as a priori information. Here we developed a general open-source implementation for gCT reconstruction and used this implementation for the first real data validation using both physical phantom study and human-subject study. Results from PET-enabled DECT were compared using x-ray DECT as the reference. Further, we applied the PET-enabled DECT method in another patient study to evaluate bone lesions. RESULTS: Compared to the standard MLAA, results from the kernel MLAA showed significantly improved image quality. PET-enabled DECT with the kernel MLAA was able to generate fractional images that were comparable to the x-ray DECT, with high correlation coefficients for both the phantom study and human subject study (R >
  0.99). The application study also indicates that PET-enabled DECT has potential to characterize bone lesions. CONCLUSION: Results from this study have demonstrated the feasibility of this PET-enabled method for CT imaging and material decomposition. PET-enabled DECT shows promise to provide comparable results to x-ray DECT.
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