Triple-gated motion and blood pool clearance corrections improve reproducibility of coronary 18F-NaF PET

Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging. 2019 Nov;46(12):2610-2620. doi: 10.1007/s00259-019-04437-x. Epub 2019 Aug 5.

Abstract

Purpose: To improve the test-retest reproducibility of coronary plaque 18F-sodium fluoride (18F-NaF) positron emission tomography (PET) uptake measurements.

Methods: We recruited 20 patients with coronary artery disease who underwent repeated hybrid PET/CT angiography (CTA) imaging within 3 weeks. All patients had 30-min PET acquisition and CTA during a single imaging session. Five PET image-sets with progressive motion correction were reconstructed: (i) a static dataset (no-MC), (ii) end-diastolic PET (standard), (iii) cardiac motion corrected (MC), (iv) combined cardiac and gross patient motion corrected (2 × MC) and, (v) cardiorespiratory and gross patient motion corrected (3 × MC). In addition to motion correction, all datasets were corrected for variations in the background activities which are introduced by variations in the injection-to-scan delays (background blood pool clearance correction, BC). Test-retest reproducibility of PET target-to-background ratio (TBR) was assessed by Bland-Altman analysis and coefficient of reproducibility.

Results: A total of 47 unique coronary lesions were identified on CTA. Motion correction in combination with BC improved the PET TBR test-retest reproducibility for all lesions (coefficient of reproducibility: standard = 0.437, no-MC = 0.345 (27% improvement), standard + BC = 0.365 (20% improvement), no-MC + BC = 0.341 (27% improvement), MC + BC = 0.288 (52% improvement), 2 × MC + BC = 0.278 (57% improvement) and 3 × C + BC = 0.254 (72% improvement), all p < 0.001). Importantly, in a sub-analysis of 18F-NaF-avid lesions with gross patient motion > 10 mm following corrections, reproducibility was improved by 133% (coefficient of reproducibility: standard = 0.745, 3 × MC = 0.320).

Conclusion: Joint corrections for cardiac, respiratory, and gross patient motion in combination with background blood pool corrections markedly improve test-retest reproducibility of coronary 18F-NaF PET.

Keywords: 18F-sodium fluoride; Cardiac PET; Data-driven motion detection; Motion correction; PET/CT; Vulnerable plaque.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Angiography
  • Coronary Artery Disease / diagnostic imaging*
  • Coronary Artery Disease / physiopathology*
  • Female
  • Fluorine Radioisotopes*
  • Gated Blood-Pool Imaging*
  • Humans
  • Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
  • Male
  • Movement*
  • Positron Emission Tomography Computed Tomography*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Sodium Fluoride*

Substances

  • Fluorine Radioisotopes
  • Sodium Fluoride
  • Fluorine-18