Medical Physics | 2019

Performance analysis of a high‐sensitivity multi‐pinhole cardiac SPECT system with hemi‐ellipsoid detectors

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


PURPOSE\nSingle-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) is a noninvasive imaging modality, used in myocardial perfusion imaging. The challenges facing the majority of clinical SPECT systems are low sensitivity, poor resolution, and the relatively high radiation dose to the patient. New generation systems (GE Discovery, DSPECT) dedicated to cardiac imaging improve sensitivity by a factor of 5-8. This improvement can be used to decrease acquisition time and/or dose. However, in the case of ultra-low dose (~3\xa0mCi) injections, acquisition times are still significantly long, taking 10-12\xa0min. The purpose of this work is to investigate a new gamma camera design with 21 hemi-ellipsoid detectors each with a pinhole collimator for cardiac SPECT for further improvement in sensitivity and resolution and reduced patient exposures and imaging times.\n\n\nMETHODS\nTo evaluate the resolution of our hemi-ellipsoid system, GATE Monte-Carlo simulations were performed on point-sources, rod-sources, and NCAT phantoms. For average full-width-half-maximum (FWHM) equivalence with base flat-detector, the pinhole-diameter for the curved hemi-ellipsoid detector was found to be 8.68\xa0mm, an operating pinhole-diameter nominally expected to be ~3 times more sensitive than state-of-the-art systems. Rod-sources equally spaced within the region of interest were acquired with a 21-detector system and reconstructed with our multi-pinhole (MPH) iterative OSEM algorithm with collimator resolution recovery. The results were compared with the results of a state-of-the-art system (GE Discovery) available in the literature. The system was also evaluated using the mathematical anthropomorphic NCAT (NURBS-based Cardiac Torso; Segars et\xa0al. IEEE Trans Nucl Sci. 1999;46:503-506) phantom with a full (clinical)-dose acquisition (25\xa0mCi) for 2\xa0min and an ultra-low dose acquisition of 3\xa0mCi for 5.44\xa0min. The estimated left ventricle (LV) counts were compared with the available literature on a state-of-the-art system (DSPECT). FWHM of the LV wall on MPH-OSEM-reconstructed images with collimator resolution recovery was estimated.\n\n\nRESULTS\nOn acquired rod-sources, the average resolution (FWHM) after reconstruction with resolution recovery in the entire region of interest (ROI) for cardiac imaging was on the average 4.44\xa0mm (±2.84), compared to 6.9\xa0mm (±1\xa0mm) reported for GE Discovery (Kennedy et\xa0al., J Nucl Cardiol. 2014:21:443-452). For NCAT studies, improved sensitivity allowed a full-dose (25\xa0mCi) 2-min acquisition (Ell8.68mmFD) which yielded 3.79\xa0M LV counts. This is ~3.35 times higher compared to 1.13\xa0M LV counts acquired in 2\xa0min for clinical full dose for state-of-the-art DSPECT. The increased sensitivity also allowed an ultra-low dose acquisition protocol (Ell8.68\xa0mmULD), 3\xa0mCi (eight times less injected dose) in 5.44\xa0min. This ultra-low dose protocol yielded ~1.23\xa0M LV counts which was comparable to the full-dose 2-min acquisition for DSPECT. The estimated NCAT average FWHM at the LV wall after 12 iterations of the OSEM reconstruction was 4.95 and 5.66\xa0mm around the mid-short-axis slices for Ell8.68mmFD and Ell8.68mmULD, respectively.\n\n\nCONCLUSION\nOur Monte-Carlo simulation studies and reconstruction suggest using (inverted wineglass sized) hemi-ellipsoid detectors with pinhole collimators can increase the sensitivity ~3.35 times over the new generation of dedicated cardiac SPECT systems, while also improving the reconstructed resolution for rod-sources with an average of 4.44\xa0mm in region of interest. The extra sensitivity may be used for ultra-low dose imaging (3\xa0mCi) at ~5.44\xa0min for comparable clinical counts as state-of-the-art systems.

Volume 46
Pages 116–126
DOI 10.1002/mp.13277
Language English
Journal Medical Physics

Full Text