Abstract

BackgroundPartial-volume effects generally result in an underestimation of tumor tracer uptake on PET-CT for small lesions, necessitating partial-volume correction (PVC) for accurate quantification. However, investigation of PVC in dynamic oncological PET studies to date is scarce. The aim of this study was to investigate PVC’s impact on tumor kinetic parameter estimation from dynamic PET-CT acquisitions and subsequent validation of simplified semi-quantitative metrics. Ten patients with EGFR-mutated non-small cell lung cancer underwent dynamic 18F-fluorothymidine PET-CT before, 7 days after, and 28 days after commencing treatment with a tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Parametric PVC was applied using iterative deconvolution without and with highly constrained backprojection (HYPR) denoising, respectively. Using an image-derived input function with venous parent plasma calibration, we estimated full kinetic parameters VT, K1, and k3/k4 (BPND) using a reversible two-tissue compartment model, and simplified metrics (SUV and tumor-to-blood ratio) at 50–60 min post-injection.ResultsPVC had a non-linear effect on measured activity concentrations per timeframe. PVC significantly changed each kinetic parameter, with a median increase in VT of 11.8% (up to 25.1%) and 10.8% (up to 21.7%) without and with HYPR, respectively. Relative changes in kinetic parameter estimates vs. simplified metrics after applying PVC were poorly correlated (correlations 0.36–0.62; p < 0.01). PVC increased correlations between simplified metrics and VT from 0.82 and 0.81 (p < 0.01) to 0.90 and 0.88 (p < 0.01) for SUV and TBR, respectively, albeit non-significantly. PVC also increased correlations between treatment-induced changes in simplified metrics vs. VT at 7 (SUV) and 28 (SUV and TBR) days after treatment start non-significantly. Delineation on partial-volume corrected PET images resulted in a median decrease in metabolic tumor volume of 14.3% (IQR − 22.1 to − 7.5%), and increased the effect of PVC on kinetic parameter estimates.ConclusionPVC has a significant impact on tumor kinetic parameter estimation from dynamic PET-CT data, which differs from its effect on simplified metrics. However, it affected validation of these simplified metrics both as single measurements and as biomarkers of treatment response only to a small extent. Future dynamic PET studies should preferably incorporate PVC.Trial registrationDutch Trial Register, NTR3557.

Highlights

  • Partial-volume effects generally result in an underestimation of tumor tracer uptake on positron-emission tomography (PET)-CT for small lesions, necessitating partial-volume correction (PVC) for accurate quantification

  • The present study aims to evaluate the impact of frame-wise parametric PVC in dynamic PET-CT studies on tumor kinetic micro- and macroparameter estimations, and evaluate the correlation between its effect on kinetic parameters and simplified metrics

  • In the present study, we evaluated the impact of frame-wise parametric PVC on tumor kinetic parameter estimation derived from dynamic PET-CT scans and the resulting effect on validation of simplified metrics

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Summary

Introduction

Partial-volume effects generally result in an underestimation of tumor tracer uptake on PET-CT for small lesions, necessitating partial-volume correction (PVC) for accurate quantification. The aim of this study was to investigate PVC’s impact on tumor kinetic parameter estimation from dynamic PET-CT acquisitions and subsequent validation of simplified semiquantitative metrics. For quantitative PET-CT to be of practical clinical utility, metrics need to be extracted from static whole-body PET-CT images as performed in routine clinical practice To this end, standardized uptake values (SUV) are typically used as simplified semi-quantitative measures of tracer uptake [6]. Pharmacokinetic modeling using dynamic PET-CT acquisitions with arterial or venous blood sampling is an essential first step to technically validate the clinical use of these simplified metrics as biomarkers of, e.g., response to treatment [4, 5, 7, 8]

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