Clinical Relevance of Partial-Volume Effect: Dependence on Lesion size and Shape

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Abstract

This study sought to systematically assess the influence of partial-volume effect (PVE) and segmentation on PET quantitative measures, hinging on lesion geometry. How this affects, e.g., prevalent maximum standardised uptake values, SUV-{\max}, and potentially impact clinical applications, e.g., response evaluation has yet to be fully discerned. From PET simulations with open-source software of variable-sized ellipsoidal lesions inserted in an anthropomorphic phantom, images of two contrasts and resolutions were generated. SUV-{\max} and volumetric indices extracted with six different segmentations were compared for variability and test-retest repeatability. The study showed similar or larger shape dependent variability and lower repeatability in SUV-{\max} than SUV-{m\mathrm{e}an}. Alternative volumetric indices might provide more robust measures but require better contouring than common thresholding. Thus findings suggested significant impact of PVE and segmentation in clinically relevant lesion sizes that can bias interpretation of SUV changes.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Titel2017 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference, NSS/MIC 2017 - Conference Proceedings
Antal sider2
ForlagIEEE
Publikationsdato12. nov. 2018
Artikelnummer8532729
ISBN (Elektronisk)9781538622827
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 12. nov. 2018
Begivenhed2017 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference, NSS/MIC 2017 - Atlanta, USA
Varighed: 21. okt. 201728. okt. 2017

Konference

Konference2017 IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium and Medical Imaging Conference, NSS/MIC 2017
Land/OmrådeUSA
ByAtlanta
Periode21/10/201728/10/2017

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