Quantitative comparison of data-driven gating and external hardware gating for 18F-FDG PET-MRI in patients with esophageal tumors

Background Respiratory motion during PET imaging reduces image quality. Data-driven gating (DDG) based on principal component analysis (PCA) can be used to identify respiratory signals. The use of DDG, without need for external devices, would greatly increase the feasibility of using respiratory gat...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of hybrid imaging 2021-03, Vol.5 (1), p.5-5, Article 5
Hauptverfasser: Kvernby, Sofia, Hult, Nafsika Korsavidou, Lindström, Elin, Sigfridsson, Jonathan, Linder, Gustav, Hedberg, Jakob, Ahlström, Håkan, Bjerner, Tomas, Lubberink, Mark
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background Respiratory motion during PET imaging reduces image quality. Data-driven gating (DDG) based on principal component analysis (PCA) can be used to identify respiratory signals. The use of DDG, without need for external devices, would greatly increase the feasibility of using respiratory gating in a routine clinical setting. The objective of this study was to evaluate data-driven gating in relation to external hardware gating and regular static image acquisition on PET-MRI data with respect to SUV max and lesion volumes. Methods Sixteen patients with esophageal or gastroesophageal cancer (Siewert I and II) underwent a 6-min PET scan on a Signa PET-MRI system (GE Healthcare) 1.5–2 h after injection of 4 MBq/kg 18 F-FDG. External hardware gating was done using a respiratory bellow device, and DDG was performed using MotionFree (GE Healthcare). The DDG raw data files and the external hardware-gating raw files were created on a Matlab-based toolbox from the whole 6-min scan LIST-file. For comparison, two 3-min static raw files were created for each patient. Images were reconstructed using TF-OSEM with resolution recovery with 2 iterations, 28 subsets, and 3-mm post filter. SUV max and lesion volume were measured in all visible lesions, and noise level was measured in the liver. Paired t -test, linear regression, Pearson correlation, and Bland-Altman analysis were used to investigate difference, correlation, and agreement between the methods. Results A total number of 30 lesions were included in the study. No significant differences between DDG and external hardware-gating SUV max or lesion volumes were found, but the noise level was significantly reduced in the DDG images. Both DDG and external hardware gating demonstrated significantly higher SUV max (9.4% for DDG, 10.3% for external hardware gating) and smaller lesion volume (− 5.4% for DDG, − 6.6% for external gating) in comparison with non-gated static images. Conclusions Data-driven gating with MotionFree for PET-MRI performed similar to external device gating for esophageal lesions with respect to SUV max and lesion volume. Both gating methods significantly increased the SUV max and reduced the lesion volume in comparison with non-gated static acquisition. DDG resulted in reduced image noise compared to external device gating and static images.
ISSN:2510-3636
2510-3636
DOI:10.1186/s41824-021-00099-x