Total-body dynamic PET/CT imaging reveals kinetic distribution of 13NNH3 in normal organs

To systematically investigate kinetic metrics and metabolic trapping of [13N]NH3 in organs.PURPOSETo systematically investigate kinetic metrics and metabolic trapping of [13N]NH3 in organs.Eleven participants performed total-body [13N]NH3 dynamic positron emission tomography (PET). Regions of intere...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of nuclear medicine and molecular imaging 2024-11, Vol.51 (13), p.3888
Hauptverfasser: Liu, Guobing, Gu, Taoying, Chen, Shuguang, Gu, Yushen, Yu, Haojun, Shi, Hongcheng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To systematically investigate kinetic metrics and metabolic trapping of [13N]NH3 in organs.PURPOSETo systematically investigate kinetic metrics and metabolic trapping of [13N]NH3 in organs.Eleven participants performed total-body [13N]NH3 dynamic positron emission tomography (PET). Regions of interest were drawn in organs to obtain time-to-activity curves (TACs), which were fitted with an irreversible two-tissue compartment model (2TC) to investigate constant rates K1, k2 and k3, and to calculate Ki. Additionally, one-tissue compartment model using full data (1TCfull) and the first four minutes of data (1TC4min) were fitted to TAC data. K1 and k2 were compared among different models to assess [13N]NH3 trapping in organs.METHODSEleven participants performed total-body [13N]NH3 dynamic positron emission tomography (PET). Regions of interest were drawn in organs to obtain time-to-activity curves (TACs), which were fitted with an irreversible two-tissue compartment model (2TC) to investigate constant rates K1, k2 and k3, and to calculate Ki. Additionally, one-tissue compartment model using full data (1TCfull) and the first four minutes of data (1TC4min) were fitted to TAC data. K1 and k2 were compared among different models to assess [13N]NH3 trapping in organs.Kinetic rates of [13N]NH3 varied significantly among organs. The mean K1 ranged from 0.049 mL/cm3/min in the muscle to 2.936 mL/cm3/min in the kidney. The k2 and k3 were lowest in the liver (0.001 min- 1) and in the pituitary (0.009 min- 1), while highest in the kidney (0.587 min- 1) and in the liver (0.800 min- 1), respectively. The Ki was largest in the myocardium (0.601 ± 0.259 mL/cm3/min) while smallest in the bone marrow (0.028 ± 0.022 mL/cm3/min). Three groups of organs with similar kinetic characteristics were revealed: (1) the thyroid, the lung, the spleen, the pancreas, and the kidney; (2) the liver and the muscle; and (3) the cortex, the white matter, the cerebellum, the pituitary, the parotid, the submandibular gland, the myocardium, the bone, and the bone marrow. Obvious k3 was identified in multiple organs, and significant changes of K1 in multiple organs and k2 in most organs were found between 2TC and 1TCfull, but both K1 and k2 were comparable between 2TC and 1TC4min.RESULTSKinetic rates of [13N]NH3 varied significantly among organs. The mean K1 ranged from 0.049 mL/cm3/min in the muscle to 2.936 mL/cm3/min in the kidney. The k2 and k3 were lowest in the liver (0.001 min- 1) and in the p
ISSN:1619-7089
1619-7089
DOI:10.1007/s00259-024-06826-3