European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging | 2019
Comparison of image quality and lesion detection between digital and analog PET/CT
Abstract
ObjectiveThe purpose of this study was to compare image quality and lesion detection capability between a digital and an analog PET/CT system in oncological patients.Materials and methodsOne hundred oncological patients (62 men, 38 women; mean age of 65\u2009±\u200912\xa0years) were prospectively included from January–June 2018. All patients, who accepted to be scanned by two systems, consecutively underwent a single day, dual imaging protocol (digital and analog PET/CT). Three nuclear medicine physicians evaluated image quality using a 4-point scale (−1, poor; 0, fair; 1, good; 2, excellent) and detection capability by counting the number of lesions with increased radiotracer uptake. Differences were considered significant for a p value <0.05.ResultsImproved image quality in the digital over the analog system was observed in 54% of the patients (p\u2009=\u20090.05, 95% CI, 44.2–63.5). The percentage of interrater concordance in lesion detection capability between the digital and analog systems was 97%, with an interrater measure agreement of κ\u2009=\u20090.901 (p\u2009<\u20090.0001). Although there was no significant difference in the total number of lesions detected by the two systems (digital: 5.03\u2009±\u200910.6 vs. analog: 4.53\u2009±\u200910.29; p\u2009=\u20090.7), the digital system detected more lesions in 22 of 83 of PET+ patients (26.5%) (p\u2009=\u20090.05, 95% CI, 17.9–36.7). In these 22 patients, all lesions detected by the digital PET/CT (and not by the analog PET/CT) were\u2009<\u200910\xa0mm.ConclusionDigital PET/CT offers improved image quality and lesion detection capability over the analog PET/CT in oncological patients, and even better for sub-centimeter lesions.