Abstract

The lack of physically measured attenuation maps (μ-maps) for attenuation and scatter correction is an important technical challenge in brain-dedicated stand-alone positron emission tomography (PET) scanners. The accuracy of the calculated attenuation correction is limited by the nonuniformity of tissue composition due to pathologic conditions and the complex structure of facial bones. The aim of this study is to develop an accurate transmission-less attenuation correction method for amyloid-β (Aβ) brain PET studies. We investigated the validity of a deep convolutional neural network trained to produce a CT-derived μ-map (μ-CT) from simultaneously reconstructed activity and attenuation maps using the MLAA (maximum likelihood reconstruction of activity and attenuation) algorithm for Aβ brain PET. The performance of three different structures of U-net models (2D, 2.5D, and 3D) were compared. The U-net models generated less noisy and more uniform μ-maps than MLAA μ-maps. Among the three different U-net models, the patch-based 3D U-net model reduced noise and cross-talk artifacts more effectively. The Dice similarity coefficients between the μ-map generated using 3D U-net and μ-CT in bone and air segments were 0.83 and 0.67. All three U-net models showed better voxel-wise correlation of the μ-maps compared to MLAA. The patch-based 3D U-net model was the best. While the uptake value of MLAA yielded a high percentage error of 20% or more, the uptake value of 3D U-nets yielded the lowest percentage error within 5%. The proposed deep learning approach that requires no transmission data, anatomic image, or atlas/template for PET attenuation correction remarkably enhanced the quantitative accuracy of the simultaneously estimated MLAA μ-maps from Aβ brain PET.

Highlights

  • Among the many different physical and technical factors affecting the image quality and quantitative accuracy of position emission tomography (PET) images, attenuation of annihilation photon pairs due to photoelectric absorption and Compton scattering is the single largest factor [1]

  • The μ-MLAA appeared very different from μ-computed tomography (CT), mainly owing to severe cross-talk artefacts between the activity and attenuation maps generated by MLAA

  • We have proposed an attenuation correction method using MLAA with deep learning

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Summary

Introduction

Among the many different physical and technical factors affecting the image quality and quantitative accuracy of position emission tomography (PET) images, attenuation of annihilation photon pairs due to photoelectric absorption and Compton scattering is the single largest factor [1]. In old PET scanners without the combination with computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), transmission sources with longlived radioisotopes, such as 68 Ga/68 Ge and 137 Cs, were used to acquire the transmission and blank scans needed for the attenuation correction (AC) in PET [2,3]. PET AC in PET/MRI remains an unsolved technical issue because MR images do not provide direct information to measure highenergy photon attenuation [11,12,13,14].

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