We present an approach for concurrent reconstruction of respiratory motion-compensated abdominal dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE)-MRI and PET data in an integrated PET/MR scanner. The MR and PET reconstructions share the same motion vector fields derived from radial MR data; the approach is robust to changes in respiratory pattern and does not increase the total acquisition time. Methods: PET and DCE-MRI data of 12 oncologic patients were simultaneously acquired for 6 min on an integrated PET/MR system after administration of 18 F-FDG and gadoterate meglumine. Goldenangle radial MR data were continuously acquired simultaneously with PET data and sorted into multiple motion phases on the basis of a respiratory signal derived directly from the radial MR data. The resulting multidimensional dataset was reconstructed using a compressed sensing approach that exploits sparsity among respiratory phases. Motion vector fields obtained using the full 6-min (MC 6-min ) and only the last 1 min (MC 1-min ) of data were incorporated into the PET reconstruction to obtain motion-corrected PET images and in an MR iterative reconstruction algorithm to produce a series of motion-corrected DCE-MR images (moco-GRASP). The motioncorrection methods (MC 6-min and MC 1-min ) were evaluated by qualitative analysis of the MR images and quantitative analysis of SUV max and SUV mean , contrast, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and lesion volume in the PET images. Results: Motion-corrected MC6-min PET images demonstrated 30%, 23%, 34%, and 18% increases in average SUV max , SUV mean , contrast, and SNR and an average 40% reduction in lesion volume with respect to the non-motion-corrected PET images. The changes in these figures of merit were smaller but still substantial for the MC MC1-min protocol: 19%, 10%, 15%, and 9% increases in average SUV max , SUV mean , contrast, and SNR; and a 28% reduction in lesion volume. Moco-GRASP images were deemed of acceptable or better diagnostic image quality with respect to conventional breath-hold Cartesian volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination acquisitions. Conclusion: We presented a method that allows the simultaneous acquisition of respiratory motion-corrected diagnostic quality DCE-MRI and quantitatively accurate PET data in an integrated PET/MR scanner with negligible prolongation in acquisition time compared with routine PET/DCE-MRI protocols.

Concurrent respiratory motion correction of abdominal PET and dynamic contrast-enhanced-MRI using a compressed sensing approach

Scipioni M.
Methodology
;
2018-01-01

Abstract

We present an approach for concurrent reconstruction of respiratory motion-compensated abdominal dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE)-MRI and PET data in an integrated PET/MR scanner. The MR and PET reconstructions share the same motion vector fields derived from radial MR data; the approach is robust to changes in respiratory pattern and does not increase the total acquisition time. Methods: PET and DCE-MRI data of 12 oncologic patients were simultaneously acquired for 6 min on an integrated PET/MR system after administration of 18 F-FDG and gadoterate meglumine. Goldenangle radial MR data were continuously acquired simultaneously with PET data and sorted into multiple motion phases on the basis of a respiratory signal derived directly from the radial MR data. The resulting multidimensional dataset was reconstructed using a compressed sensing approach that exploits sparsity among respiratory phases. Motion vector fields obtained using the full 6-min (MC 6-min ) and only the last 1 min (MC 1-min ) of data were incorporated into the PET reconstruction to obtain motion-corrected PET images and in an MR iterative reconstruction algorithm to produce a series of motion-corrected DCE-MR images (moco-GRASP). The motioncorrection methods (MC 6-min and MC 1-min ) were evaluated by qualitative analysis of the MR images and quantitative analysis of SUV max and SUV mean , contrast, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), and lesion volume in the PET images. Results: Motion-corrected MC6-min PET images demonstrated 30%, 23%, 34%, and 18% increases in average SUV max , SUV mean , contrast, and SNR and an average 40% reduction in lesion volume with respect to the non-motion-corrected PET images. The changes in these figures of merit were smaller but still substantial for the MC MC1-min protocol: 19%, 10%, 15%, and 9% increases in average SUV max , SUV mean , contrast, and SNR; and a 28% reduction in lesion volume. Moco-GRASP images were deemed of acceptable or better diagnostic image quality with respect to conventional breath-hold Cartesian volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination acquisitions. Conclusion: We presented a method that allows the simultaneous acquisition of respiratory motion-corrected diagnostic quality DCE-MRI and quantitatively accurate PET data in an integrated PET/MR scanner with negligible prolongation in acquisition time compared with routine PET/DCE-MRI protocols.
2018
Fuin, N.; Catalano, O. A.; Scipioni, M.; Canjels, L. P. W.; Izquierdo-Garcia, D.; Pedemonte, S.; Catana, C.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/1001691
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