Abstract

BackgroundQuantitative SPECT imaging in targeted radionuclide therapy with lutetium-177 holds great potential for individualized treatment based on dose assessment. The establishment of dose-effect relations requires a standardized method for SPECT quantification. The purpose of this multi-center study is to evaluate quantitative accuracy and inter-system variations of different SPECT/CT systems with corresponding commercially available quantitative reconstruction algorithms. This is an important step towards a vendor-independent standard for quantitative lutetium-177 SPECT.MethodsFour state-of-the-art SPECT/CT systems were included: Discovery™ NM/CT 670Pro (GE Healthcare), Symbia Intevo™, and two Symbia™ T16 (Siemens Healthineers). Quantitative accuracy and inter-system variations were evaluated by repeatedly scanning a cylindrical phantom with 6 spherical inserts (0.5 – 113 ml). A sphere-to-background activity concentration ratio of 10:1 was used. Acquisition settings were standardized: medium energy collimator, body contour trajectory, photon energy window of 208 keV (± 10%), adjacent 20% lower scatter window, 2 × 64 projections, 128 × 128 matrix size, and 40 s projection time. Reconstructions were performed using GE Evolution with Q.Metrix™, Siemens xSPECT Quant™, Siemens Broad Quantification™ or Siemens Flash3D™ algorithms using vendor recommended settings. In addition, projection data were reconstructed using Hermes SUV SPECT™ with standardized reconstruction settings to obtain a vendor-neutral quantitative reconstruction for all systems. Volumes of interest (VOI) for the spheres were obtained by applying a 50% threshold of the sphere maximum voxel value corrected for background activity. For each sphere, the mean and maximum recovery coefficient (RCmean and RCmax) of three repeated measurements was calculated, defined as the imaged activity concentration divided by the actual activity concentration. Inter-system variations were defined as the range of RC over all systems.ResultsRC decreased with decreasing sphere volume. Inter-system variations with vendor-specific reconstructions were between 0.06 and 0.41 for RCmean depending on sphere size (maximum 118% quantification difference), and improved to 0.02–0.19 with vendor-neutral reconstructions (maximum 38% quantification difference).ConclusionThis study shows that eliminating sources of possible variation drastically reduces inter-system variation in quantification. This means that absolute SPECT quantification for 177Lu is feasible in a multi-center and multi-vendor setting; however, close agreement between vendors and sites is key for multi-center dosimetry and quantitative biomarker studies.

Highlights

  • Quantitative SPECT imaging in targeted radionuclide therapy with lutetium-177 (177Lu) holds great potential for dosimetry-based individualized treatment and may improve prediction of therapy response, prevention of toxicity effects and treatment follow-up

  • This means that absolute SPECT quantification for 177Lu is feasible in a multi-center and multi-vendor setting; close agreement between vendors and sites is key for multi-center dosimetry and quantitative biomarker studies

  • The error in calibration factor (CF) is assumed to be within 5% since it is dominated by the uncertainty in the activity used in the cylindrical phantom

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Quantitative SPECT imaging in targeted radionuclide therapy with lutetium-177 (177Lu) holds great potential for dosimetry-based individualized treatment and may improve prediction of therapy response, prevention of toxicity effects and treatment follow-up. SPECT quantification is considered less straightforward than PET quantification [10, 11] This can be explained by several factors including lower sensitivity due to the necessary use of a collimator, the need for more complicated scatter and attenuation correction [11] and a lower resolution creating partial volume effects. The establishment of dose-effect relations requires a standardized method for SPECT quantification The purpose of this multi-center study is to evaluate quantitative accuracy and inter-system variations of different SPECT/CT systems with corresponding commercially available quantitative reconstruction algorithms. This is an important step towards a vendor-independent standard for quantitative lutetium-177 SPECT

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call