Abstract

The acquisition of in vivo radiopharmaceutical distribution through imaging is time-consuming due to dosimetry, which requires the subject to be scanned at several time points post-injection. This study aimed to generate delayed positron emission tomography images from early images using a deep-learning-based image generation model to mitigate the time cost and inconvenience. Eighteen healthy participants were recruited and injected with [18F]Fluorodeoxyglucose. A paired image-to-image translation model, based on a generative adversarial network (GAN), was used as the generation model. The standardized uptake value (SUV) mean of the generated image of each organ was compared with that of the ground-truth. The least square GAN and perceptual loss combinations displayed the best performance. As the uptake time of the early image became closer to that of the ground-truth image, the translation performance improved. The SUV mean values of the nominated organs were estimated reasonably accurately for the muscle, heart, liver, and spleen. The results demonstrate that the image-to-image translation deep learning model is applicable for the generation of a functional image from another functional image acquired from normal subjects, including predictions of organ-wise activity for specific normal organs.

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