Abstract

This study aims to develop deep learning techniques on total-body PET to bolster the feasibility of sedation-free pediatric PET imaging. A deformable 3D U-Net was developed based on 245 adult subjects with standard total-body PET imaging for the quality enhancement of simulated rapid imaging. The developed method was first tested on 16 children receiving total-body [18F]FDG PET scans with standard 300-s acquisition time with sedation. Sixteen rapid scans (acquisition time about 3 s, 6 s, 15 s, 30 s, and 75 s) were retrospectively simulated by selecting the reconstruction time window. In the end, the developed methodology was prospectively tested on five children without sedation to prove the routine feasibility. The approach significantly improved the subjective image quality and lesion conspicuity in abdominal and pelvic regions of the generated 6-s data. In the first test set, the proposed method enhanced the objective image quality metrics of 6-s data, such as PSNR (from 29.13 to 37.09, p < 0.01) and SSIM (from 0.906 to 0.921, p < 0.01). Furthermore, the errors of mean standardized uptake values (SUVmean) for lesions between 300-s data and 6-s data were reduced from 12.9 to 4.1% (p < 0.01), and the errors of max SUV (SUVmax) were reduced from 17.4 to 6.2% (p < 0.01). In the prospective test, radiologists reached a high degree of consistency on the clinical feasibility of the enhanced PET images. The proposed method can effectively enhance the image quality of total-body PET scanning with ultrafast acquisition time, leading to meeting clinical diagnostic requirements of lesion detectability and quantification in abdominal and pelvic regions. It has much potential to solve the dilemma of the use of sedation and long acquisition time that influence the health of pediatric patients.

Full Text
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