Abstract

Point-spread-function (PSF) correction is not recommended for amyloid PET images due to Gibbs artifacts. Q.Clear™, a Bayesian Penalized Likelihood (BPL) reconstruction method without incorporating PSF correction reduces these artifacts but degrades image contrast by our previous findings. The present study aimed to recover lost contrast by optimizing reconstruction parameters in time-of-flight (TOF) BPL reconstruction of amyloid PET images without PSF correction. We selected candidate conditions based on a phantom study and then determined which were optimal in a clinical study. Phantom images were reconstructed under conditions of 1‒9 iterations, β 300-1000 and γ factors from 2 to 10 in TOF-BPL without PSF correction. We evaluated the %contrast and the coefficients of variation (CV, %). Standardized uptake value ratios (SUVr) and Centiloid scales (CL) were calculated from PET images acquired from 71 participants after an [18F]flutemetamol injection. Both %contrast and CV were independent of iterations, whereas a trade-off was found between γ factors and β. We selected a γ factors of 5 without PSF correction (iterations, 1; β, 500) and of 10 without PSF correction (iterations, 1; β, 800) as candidates for clinical investigation. The SUVr and CL remained stable across various conditions, and CL scales effectively discriminated amyloid PET using measured values. The optimal reconstruction parameters of TOF-BPL for [18F]flutemetamol PET images were γ factor 10, iterations 1 and β 800, without PSF correction.

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