2014
DOI: 10.1118/1.4868458
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Relative role of motion and PSF compensation in whole‐body oncologic PET‐MR imaging

Abstract: The results suggest that the proposed quantitative PET-MR methods can significantly enhance the performance of tumor diagnosis and staging as compared to conventional methods. This approach may enable utilization of the full potential of the scanner in oncologic studies of both the lower abdomen, with moving lesions, as well as other parts of the body unaffected by motion.

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Cited by 37 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…This finding contrasts with our observation and may hint at the advantages of motion correction incorporated into the reconstruction algorithm, where in the present study for both evaluated methods contrast and SNR were significantly better than in gated images but tracer uptake and volume were not significantly different (resp_bestpet). Petibon et al (24) reconstructed motioncorrected images of one liver case using MR-derived motion information. They reported comparable results, that is, an increase in target-to-background ratio, which was defined identically to contrast as used by Würslin, of between 22% and 45%, whereas apparent lesion volumes decreased by between 13% and 29%, depending on the lesion, if compared with static images.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This finding contrasts with our observation and may hint at the advantages of motion correction incorporated into the reconstruction algorithm, where in the present study for both evaluated methods contrast and SNR were significantly better than in gated images but tracer uptake and volume were not significantly different (resp_bestpet). Petibon et al (24) reconstructed motioncorrected images of one liver case using MR-derived motion information. They reported comparable results, that is, an increase in target-to-background ratio, which was defined identically to contrast as used by Würslin, of between 22% and 45%, whereas apparent lesion volumes decreased by between 13% and 29%, depending on the lesion, if compared with static images.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The respective authors derived their results either from animal studies (16) or with simulated or phantom data (17)(18)(19)(20)(21)(22). PET-driven motion correction was assessed with the data of 14 patients (14), whereas MR-based motion correction has so far been evaluated with the data of 5 patients at most (23,24).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although a recent study has investigated the role of motion compensation and PSF modeling in PET/MR imaging (16), studies investigating the effect of PSF reconstruction on clinical data in the context of PET/MR hybrid imaging are still sparse. The main objective of our study, thus, was to systematically investigate the impact of PSF-based reconstruction on PET/MR quantitatively and qualitatively in phantom experiments, as well as in patients.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The breathing is modeled here as a rigid transformation (only translations, no rotation) by a 3D anisotropic kernel with the maximum amplitudes, 50 but the location-specific motion, i.e., larger at the liver dome, and smaller toward the inferior part, can be applied, requiring a combination of rigid and nonrigid transformations. 50,60 In this scenario, image correction would be challenging, due to the limited number of features provided by commercial software. 61 However, some authors claimed that considering a rigid motion, the error is of the order of 3 mm.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%