Reducing Calibration Time in PET Systems Based on Monolithic Crystals

In the past years, the gamma-ray detector designs based on the monolithic crystals have demonstrated to be excellent candidates for the design of high-performance PET systems. The monolithic crystals allow to achieve the intrinsic detector resolutions well below state-of-the-art; to increase packing...

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Main Authors: Marta Freire, Gabriel Cañizares, Sara Echegoyen, Andrea Gonzalez-Montoro, Antonio J. Gonzalez
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-11-01
Series:Frontiers in Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmed.2021.734476/full
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author Marta Freire
Gabriel Cañizares
Sara Echegoyen
Andrea Gonzalez-Montoro
Antonio J. Gonzalez
author_facet Marta Freire
Gabriel Cañizares
Sara Echegoyen
Andrea Gonzalez-Montoro
Antonio J. Gonzalez
author_sort Marta Freire
collection DOAJ
description In the past years, the gamma-ray detector designs based on the monolithic crystals have demonstrated to be excellent candidates for the design of high-performance PET systems. The monolithic crystals allow to achieve the intrinsic detector resolutions well below state-of-the-art; to increase packing fraction thus, increasing the system sensitivity; and to improve lesion detectability at the edges of the scanner field of view (FOV) because of their intrinsic depth of interaction (DOI) capabilities. The bottleneck to translate to the clinical PET systems based on a large number of monolithic detectors is eventually the requirement of mechanically complex and time-consuming calibration processes. To mitigate this drawback, several methods have been already proposed, such as using non-physically collimated radioactive sources or implementing the neuronal networks (NN) algorithms trained with simulated data. In this work, we aimed to simplify and fasten a calibration process of the monolithic based systems. The Normal procedure consists of individually acquiring a 11 × 11 22Na source array for all the detectors composing the PET system and obtaining the calibration map for each module using a method based on the Voronoi diagrams. Two reducing time methodologies are presented: (i) TEST1, where the calibration map of one detector is estimated and shared among all others, and (ii) TEST2, where the calibration map is slightly modified for each module as a function of their detector uniformity map. The experimental data from a dedicated prostate PET system was used to compare the standard calibration procedure with both the proposed methods. A greater similarity was exhibited between the TEST2 methodology and the Normal procedure; obtaining spatial resolution variances within 0.1 mm error bars and count rate deviations as small as 0.2%. Moreover, the negligible reconstructed image differences (13% deviation at most in the contrast-to-noise ratio) and almost identical contrast values were reported. Therefore, this proposed method allows us to calibrate the PET systems based on the monolithic crystals reducing the calibration time by approximately 80% compared with the Normal procedure.
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spelling doaj.art-d448a1ed2e624d31b135155feba5335d2022-12-21T20:44:37ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Medicine2296-858X2021-11-01810.3389/fmed.2021.734476734476Reducing Calibration Time in PET Systems Based on Monolithic CrystalsMarta FreireGabriel CañizaresSara EchegoyenAndrea Gonzalez-MontoroAntonio J. GonzalezIn the past years, the gamma-ray detector designs based on the monolithic crystals have demonstrated to be excellent candidates for the design of high-performance PET systems. The monolithic crystals allow to achieve the intrinsic detector resolutions well below state-of-the-art; to increase packing fraction thus, increasing the system sensitivity; and to improve lesion detectability at the edges of the scanner field of view (FOV) because of their intrinsic depth of interaction (DOI) capabilities. The bottleneck to translate to the clinical PET systems based on a large number of monolithic detectors is eventually the requirement of mechanically complex and time-consuming calibration processes. To mitigate this drawback, several methods have been already proposed, such as using non-physically collimated radioactive sources or implementing the neuronal networks (NN) algorithms trained with simulated data. In this work, we aimed to simplify and fasten a calibration process of the monolithic based systems. The Normal procedure consists of individually acquiring a 11 × 11 22Na source array for all the detectors composing the PET system and obtaining the calibration map for each module using a method based on the Voronoi diagrams. Two reducing time methodologies are presented: (i) TEST1, where the calibration map of one detector is estimated and shared among all others, and (ii) TEST2, where the calibration map is slightly modified for each module as a function of their detector uniformity map. The experimental data from a dedicated prostate PET system was used to compare the standard calibration procedure with both the proposed methods. A greater similarity was exhibited between the TEST2 methodology and the Normal procedure; obtaining spatial resolution variances within 0.1 mm error bars and count rate deviations as small as 0.2%. Moreover, the negligible reconstructed image differences (13% deviation at most in the contrast-to-noise ratio) and almost identical contrast values were reported. Therefore, this proposed method allows us to calibrate the PET systems based on the monolithic crystals reducing the calibration time by approximately 80% compared with the Normal procedure.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmed.2021.734476/fullpositron emission tomographymonolithic crystalscalibrationtotal-body PETwhole-body PET
spellingShingle Marta Freire
Gabriel Cañizares
Sara Echegoyen
Andrea Gonzalez-Montoro
Antonio J. Gonzalez
Reducing Calibration Time in PET Systems Based on Monolithic Crystals
Frontiers in Medicine
positron emission tomography
monolithic crystals
calibration
total-body PET
whole-body PET
title Reducing Calibration Time in PET Systems Based on Monolithic Crystals
title_full Reducing Calibration Time in PET Systems Based on Monolithic Crystals
title_fullStr Reducing Calibration Time in PET Systems Based on Monolithic Crystals
title_full_unstemmed Reducing Calibration Time in PET Systems Based on Monolithic Crystals
title_short Reducing Calibration Time in PET Systems Based on Monolithic Crystals
title_sort reducing calibration time in pet systems based on monolithic crystals
topic positron emission tomography
monolithic crystals
calibration
total-body PET
whole-body PET
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmed.2021.734476/full
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AT saraechegoyen reducingcalibrationtimeinpetsystemsbasedonmonolithiccrystals
AT andreagonzalezmontoro reducingcalibrationtimeinpetsystemsbasedonmonolithiccrystals
AT antoniojgonzalez reducingcalibrationtimeinpetsystemsbasedonmonolithiccrystals