Abstract

Attenuation correction (AC) of positron emission tomography (PET) data poses a challenge when no transmission data or computed tomography (CT) data are available, e.g. in stand alone PET scanners or PET/magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). In these cases, external imaging data or morphological imaging data are normally used for the generation of attenuation maps. Newly introduced machine learning methods however may allow for direct estimation of attenuation maps from non attenuation-corrected PET data (PETNAC). Our purpose was thus to establish and evaluate a method for independent AC of brain fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) PET images only based on PETNAC using Generative Adversarial Networks (GAN). After training of the deep learning GAN framework on a paired training dataset of PETNAC and the corresponding CT images of the head from 50 patients, pseudo-CT images were generated from PETNAC of 40 validation patients, of which 20 were used for technical validation and 20 stemming from patients with CNS disorders were used for clinical validation. Pseudo-CT was used for subsequent AC of these validation data sets resulting in independently attenuation-corrected PET data. Visual inspection revealed a high degree of resemblance of generated pseudo-CT images compared to the acquired CT images in all validation data sets, with minor differences in individual anatomical details. Quantitative analyses revealed minimal underestimation below 5% of standardized uptake value (SUV) in all brain regions in independently attenuation-corrected PET data compared to the reference PET images. Color-coded error maps showed no regional bias and only minimal average errors around ±0%. Using independently attenuation-corrected PET data, no differences in image-based diagnoses were observed in 20 patients with neurological disorders compared to the reference PET images. Independent AC of brain 18F-FDG PET is feasible with high accuracy using the proposed, easy to implement deep learning framework. Further evaluation in clinical cohorts will be necessary to assess the clinical performance of this method.

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