Abstract

With the development of new radiopharmaceutical therapies, quantitative SPECT/CT has progressively emerged as a crucial tool for dosimetry. One major obstacle of SPECT is its poor resolution, which results in blurring of the activity distribution. Especially for small objects, this so-called partial-volume effect limits the accuracy of activity quantification. Numerous methods for partial-volume correction (PVC) have been proposed, but most methods have the disadvantage of assuming a spatially invariant resolution of the imaging system, which does not hold for SPECT. Furthermore, most methods require a segmentation based on anatomic information. Methods: We introduce DL-PVC, a methodology for PVC of 177Lu SPECT/CT imaging using deep learning (DL). Training was based on a dataset of 10,000 random activity distributions placed in extended cardiac-torso body phantoms. Realistic SPECT acquisitions were created using the SIMIND Monte Carlo simulation program. SPECT reconstructions without and with resolution modeling were performed using the CASToR and STIR reconstruction software, respectively. The pairs of ground-truth activity distributions and simulated SPECT images were used for training various U-Nets. Quantitative analysis of the performance of these U-Nets was based on metrics such as the structural similarity index measure or normalized root-mean-square error, but also on volume activity accuracy, a new metric that describes the fraction of voxels in which the determined activity concentration deviates from the true activity concentration by less than a certain margin. On the basis of this analysis, the optimal parameters for normalization, input size, and network architecture were identified. Results: Our simulation-based analysis revealed that DL-PVC (0.95/7.8%/35.8% for structural similarity index measure/normalized root-mean-square error/volume activity accuracy) outperforms SPECT without PVC (0.89/10.4%/12.1%) and after iterative Yang PVC (0.94/8.6%/15.1%). Additionally, we validated DL-PVC on 177Lu SPECT/CT measurements of 3-dimensionally printed phantoms of different geometries. Although DL-PVC showed activity recovery similar to that of the iterative Yang method, no segmentation was required. In addition, DL-PVC was able to correct other image artifacts such as Gibbs ringing, making it clearly superior at the voxel level. Conclusion: In this work, we demonstrate the added value of DL-PVC for quantitative 177Lu SPECT/CT. Our analysis validates the functionality of DL-PVC and paves the way for future deployment on clinical image data.

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