Development of a Dedicated Rebinner with Rigid Motion Correction for the mMR PET/MR Scanner, and Validation in a Large Cohort of 11 C-PIB Scans

Head motion occurring during brain PET studies leads to image blurring and to bias in measured local quantities. The objective of this work was to implement a correction method for PET data acquired with the mMR synchronous PET/MR scanner. A list-mode-based motion-correction approach has been design...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of Nuclear Medicine Vol. 59; no. 11; pp. 1761 - 1767
Main Authors Reilhac, Anthonin, Merida, Inés, Irace, Zacharie, Stephenson, Mary C., Weekes, Ashley A., Chen, Christopher, Totman, John J., Townsend, David W., Fayad, Hadi, Costes, Nicolas
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.11.2018
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Summary:Head motion occurring during brain PET studies leads to image blurring and to bias in measured local quantities. The objective of this work was to implement a correction method for PET data acquired with the mMR synchronous PET/MR scanner. A list-mode-based motion-correction approach has been designed. The developed rebinner chronologically reads the recorded events from the Siemens list-mode file, applies the estimated geometric transformations, and frames the detected counts into sinograms. The rigid-body motion parameters were estimated from an initial dynamic reconstruction of the PET data. We then optimized the correction for C-Pittsburgh compound B ( C-PIB) scans using simulated and actual data with well-controlled motion. An efficient list-mode-based motion correction approach has been implemented, fully optimized, and validated using simulated and actual PET data. The average spatial resolution loss induced by inaccuracies in motion parameter estimates and by the rebinning process was estimated to correspond to a 1-mm increase in full width at half maximum with motion parameters estimated directly from the PET data with a temporal frequency of 20 s. The results show that the rebinner can be safely applied to the C-PIB scans, allowing almost complete removal of motion-induced artifacts. The application of the correction method to a large cohort of C-PIB scans led to the following observations: first, that more than 21% of the scans were affected by motion greater than 10 mm (39% for subjects with Mini-Mental State Examination scores below 20), and second, that the correction led to quantitative changes in Alzheimer-specific cortical regions of up to 30%. The rebinner allows accurate motion correction at a cost of minimal resolution reduction. Application of the correction to a large cohort of C-PIB scans confirmed the necessity of systematically correcting for motion to obtain quantitative results.
ISSN:0161-5505
2159-662X
1535-5667
DOI:10.2967/jnumed.117.206375