Simulation study of a brain PET scanner using TOF-DOI detectors equipped with first interaction position detection.
Yingying LiMitsuo WatanabeTakashi IsobeKibo OteAoi TokuiTomohide OmuraHuafeng LiuPublished in: Physics in medicine and biology (2022)
Objective . The aim of this study is to evaluate the performance characteristics of a brain positron emission tomography (PET) scanner composed of four-layer independent read-out time-of-flight depth-of-interaction (TOF-DOI) detectors capable of first interaction position (FIP) detection, using Geant4 application for tomographic emission(GATE). This includes the spatial resolution, sensitivity, count rate capability, and reconstructed image quality. Approach . The proposed TOF-DOI PET detector comprises four layers of a 50 × 50 cerium-doped lutetium-yttrium oxyorthosilicate (LYSO:Ce) scintillator array with 1 mm pitch size, coupled to a 16 × 16 multi-pixel photon counter array with 3.0 mm × 3.0 mm photosensitive segments. Along the direction distant from the center field-of-view (FOV), the scintillator thickness of the four layers is 2.5, 3, 4, and 6 mm. The four layers were simulated with a 150 ps coincidence time resolution and the independent readout make the FIP detection capable. The spatial resolution and imaging performance were compared among the true-FIP, winner-takes-all (WTA) and front-layer FIP (FL-FIP) methods (FL-FIP selects the interaction position located on the front-most interaction layer in all the interaction layers). The National Electrical Manufacturers Association NU 2-2018 procedure was referred and modified to evaluate the performance of proposed scanner. Main results . In detector evaluation, the intrinsic spatial resolutions were 0.52 and 0.76 mm full width at half-maximum (FWHM) at 0° and 30° incident γ -rays in the first layer pair, respectively. The reconstructed spatial resolution by the filter backprojection (FBP) achieved sub-millimeter FWHM on average over the whole FOV. The maximum true count rate was 207.6 kcps at 15 kBq ml -1 and the noise equivalent count rate (NECR_2R) was 54.7 kcps at 6.0 kBq ml -1 . Total sensitivity was 45.2 cps kBq -1 and 48.4 cps kBq -1 at the center and 10 cm off-center FOV, respectively. The TOF and DOI reconstructions significantly improved the image quality in the phantom studies. Moreover, the FL-FIP outperformed the conventional WTA method in terms of the spatial resolution and image quality. Significance . The proposed brain PET scanner could achieve sub-millimeter spatial resolution and high image quality with TOF and DOI reconstruction, which is meaningful to the clinical oncology research. Meanwhile, the comparison among the three positioning methods indicated that the FL-FIP decreased the image degradation caused by Compton scatter more than WTA.
Keyphrases
- image quality
- computed tomography
- positron emission tomography
- mass spectrometry
- ms ms
- single molecule
- dual energy
- pet ct
- pet imaging
- magnetic resonance imaging
- white matter
- palliative care
- cardiovascular disease
- high throughput
- peripheral blood
- resting state
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- lymph node
- label free
- air pollution
- monte carlo
- magnetic resonance
- machine learning
- deep learning
- cerebral ischemia
- optical coherence tomography
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- living cells
- functional connectivity
- photodynamic therapy
- blood brain barrier