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      Data-Driven Respiratory Gating Outperforms Device-Based Gating for Clinical 18F-FDG PET/CT.

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          Abstract

          A data-driven method for respiratory gating in PET has recently been commercially developed. We sought to compare the performance of the algorithm with an external, device-based system for oncologic 18F-FDG PET/CT imaging. Methods: In total, 144 whole-body 18F-FDG PET/CT examinations were acquired, with a respiratory gating waveform recorded by an external, device-based respiratory gating system. In each examination, 2 of the bed positions covering the liver and lung bases were acquired with a duration of 6 min. Quiescent-period gating retaining approximately 50% of coincidences was then able to produce images with an effective duration of 3 min for these 2 bed positions, matching the other bed positions. For each examination, 4 reconstructions were performed and compared: data-driven gating (DDG) (we use the term DDG-retro to distinguish that we did not use the real-time R-threshold-based application of DDG that is available within the manufacturer's product), external device-based gating (real-time position management (RPM)-gated), no gating but using only the first 3 min of data (ungated-matched), and no gating retaining all coincidences (ungated-full). Lesions in the images were quantified and image quality scored by a radiologist who was masked to the method of data processing. Results: Compared with the other reconstruction options, DDG-retro increased the SUVmax and decreased the threshold-defined lesion volume. Compared with RPM-gated, DDG-retro gave an average increase in SUVmax of 0.66 ± 0.1 g/mL (n = 87, P < 0.0005). Although the results from the masked image evaluation were most commonly equivalent, DDG-retro was preferred over RPM-gated in 13% of examinations, whereas the opposite occurred in just 2% of examinations. This was a significant preference for DDG-retro (P = 0.008, n = 121). Liver lesions were identified in 23 examinations. Considering this subset of data, DDG-retro was ranked superior to ungated-full in 6 of 23 (26%) cases. Gated reconstruction using the external device failed in 16% of examinations, whereas DDG-retro always provided a clinically acceptable image. Conclusion: In this clinical evaluation, DDG-retro provided performance superior to that of the external device-based system. For most examinations the performance was equivalent, but DDG-retro had superior performance in 13% of examinations, leading to a significant preference overall.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Nucl Med
          Journal of nuclear medicine : official publication, Society of Nuclear Medicine
          Society of Nuclear Medicine
          1535-5667
          0161-5505
          November 2020
          : 61
          : 11
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Radiation Physics and Protection, Oxford University Hospitals NHS FT, Oxford, United Kingdom matthew.walker@ouh.nhs.uk.
          [2 ] Radiation Physics and Protection, Oxford University Hospitals NHS FT, Oxford, United Kingdom.
          [3 ] Department of Radiology, Churchill Hospital, Oxford, United Kingdom.
          [4 ] Wales Research and Diagnostic PET Imaging Centre, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United Kingdom; and.
          [5 ] Department of Oncology, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom.
          Article
          jnumed.120.242248 EMS86200
          10.2967/jnumed.120.242248
          7116324
          32245898
          2eb9fd5c-9930-460c-b596-050635dd9799
          © 2020 by the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging.
          History

          FDG,respiratory gating,data-driven gating,RPM,PET/CT
          FDG, respiratory gating, data-driven gating, RPM, PET/CT

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