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MR-based respiratory and cardiac motion correction for PET imaging

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 06:05 authored by Thomas Kustner, Martin Schwartz, Petros Martirosian, Sergios Gatidis, Ferdinand Seith, Christopher Gilliam, Blu Thierry, Hadi Fayad, Dimitris Visvikis, Fritz Schick, Bin Yang, Holger Schmidt, Nina Schwenzer
Purpose: To develop a motion correction for Positron-Emission-Tomography (PET) using simultaneously acquired magnetic-resonance (MR) images within 90 s. Methods: A 90 s MR acquisition allows the generation of a cardiac and respiratory motion model of the body trunk. Thereafter, further diagnostic MR sequences can be recorded during the PET examination without any limitation. To provide full PET scan time coverage, a sensor fusion approach maps external motion signals (respiratory belt, ECG-derived respiration signal) to a complete surrogate signal on which the retrospective data binning is performed. A joint Compressed Sensing reconstruction and motion estimation of the subsampled data provides motion-resolved MR images (respiratory + cardiac). A 1-POINT DIXON method is applied to these MR images to derive a motion-resolved attenuation map. The motion model and the attenuation map are fed to the Customizable and Advanced Software for Tomographic Reconstruction (CASToR) PET reconstruction system in which the motion correction is incorporated. All reconstruction steps are performed online on the scanner via Gadgetron to provide a clinically feasible setup for improved general applicability. The method was evaluated on 36 patients with suspected liver or lung metastasis in terms of lesion quantification (SUVmax, SNR, contrast), delineation (FWHM, slope steepness) and diagnostic confidence level (3-point Likert-scale). Results: A motion correction could be conducted for all patients, however, only in 30 patients moving lesions could be observed. For the examined 134 malignant lesions, an average improvement in lesion quantification of 22%, delineation of 64% and diagnostic confidence level of 23% was achieved. Conclusion: The proposed method provides a clinically feasible setup for respiratory and cardiac motion correction of PET data by simultaneous short-term MRI. The acquisition sequence and all reconstruction steps are publicly available to fost

History

Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1016/j.media.2017.08.002
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 13618415

Journal

Medical Image Analysis

Volume

42

Start page

129

End page

144

Total pages

16

Publisher

Elsevier

Place published

Netherlands

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 Elsevier B.V.

Former Identifier

2006081879

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2018-09-20

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