Simulation studies of a full-ring, CZT SPECT system for whole-body imaging of Tc-99m and Lu-177

MEDICAL PHYSICS(2023)

Cited 2|Views18
No score
Abstract
BackgroundSingle photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) is an imaging modality that has demonstrated its utility in a number of clinical indications. Despite this progress, a high sensitivity, high spatial resolution, multi-tracer SPECT with a large field of view suitable for whole-body imaging of a broad range of radiotracers for theranostics is not available. PurposeWith the goal of filling this technological gap, we have designed a cadmium zinc telluride (CZT) full-ring SPECT scanner instrumented with a broad-energy tungsten collimator. The final purpose is to provide a multi-tracer solution for brain and whole-body imaging. Our static SPECT does not rely on the dual- and the triple-head rotational SPECT standard paradigm, enabling a larger effective area in each scan to increase the sensitivity. We provide a demonstration of the performance of our design using a realistic model of our detector with simulated body-sized phantoms filled with Tc-99m and Lu-177. MethodsWe create a realistic model of our detector by using a combination of a Geant4 Application for Tomographic Emission (GATE) Monte Carlo simulation and a finite element model for the CZT response, accounting for low-energy tail effects in CZT that affects the sensitivity and the scatter correction. We implement a modified dual-energy-window scatter correction adapted for CZT. Other corrections for attenuation, detector and collimator response, and detector gaps and edges are also included. The images are reconstructed using the maximum-likelihood expectation-maximization. Detector and reconstruction performance are characterized with point sources, Derenzo phantoms, and a body-sized National Electrical Manufacturers Association (NEMA) Image Quality (IQ) phantom for both Tc-99m and Lu-177. ResultsOur SPECT design can resolve 7.9 mm rods for Tc-99m (140 keV) and 9.5 mm for Lu-177 (208 keV) in a hot-rod Derenzo phantom with a 3-min exposure and reach an image contrast of 78% for Tc-99m and 57% for Lu-177 using the NEMA IQ phantom with a 6-min exposure. Our modified scatter correction shows an improved contrast-recovery ratio compared to a standard correction. ConclusionsIn this paper, we demonstrate the good performance of our design for whole-body imaging purposes. This adds to our previous demonstration of improved qualitative and quantitative Tc-99m imaging of brain perfusion and I-123 imaging of dopamine transport with respect to state-of-the-art NaI dual-head cameras. We show that our design provides similar IQ and contrast to the commercial full-ring SPECT VERITON for Tc-99m. Regarding Lu-177 imaging of the 208 keV emissions, our design provides similar contrast to that of other state-of-the-art SPECTs with a significant reduction in exposure. The high sensitivity and extended energy range up to 250 keV makes our SPECT design a promising alternative for clinical imaging and theranostics of emerging radionuclides.
More
Translated text
Key words
CZT,finite element method,full-ring,Monte Carlo simulation,SPECT
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined