Improved accuracy of the biodistribution and internal radiation dosimetry of 13 N‐ammonia using a total‐body PET/CT scanner

Conventional short-axis PET typically utilizes multi-bed multi-pass acquisition to produce quantitative whole-body dynamic images and cannot record all the uptake information simultaneously, resulting in errors when fitting the time-activity curves (TACs) and calculating radiation doses. The aim of...

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Published inMedical physics (Lancaster) Vol. 50; no. 9; pp. 5865 - 5874
Main Authors Yu, Xiaofeng, Sun, Hongyan, Xu, Lian, Han, Yuan, Wang, Cheng, Li, Lianghua, Ng, Yee Ling, Shi, Fuxiao, Qiu, Ju, Huang, Gang, Zhou, Yun, Chen, Yumei, Liu, Jianjun
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.09.2023
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ISSN0094-2405
2473-4209
2473-4209
DOI10.1002/mp.16450

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Summary:Conventional short-axis PET typically utilizes multi-bed multi-pass acquisition to produce quantitative whole-body dynamic images and cannot record all the uptake information simultaneously, resulting in errors when fitting the time-activity curves (TACs) and calculating radiation doses. The aim of this study is to evaluate the N-ammonia biodistribution and the internal radiation doses using a 194 cm long total-body PET/CT scanner (uEXPLORER), and make a comparison with the previous short-axis PET results. Ten subjects (age 40-74 years) received N-NH injection (418.1-670.81 MBq) and were under a dynamic scan for about 60 min with using a 3-dimensional whole-body protocol. ROIs were drawn visually on 11 major organs (brain, thyroid, gallbladder, heart wall, kidneys, liver, pancreas, spleen, lungs, bone marrow, and urinary bladder content) for each subject. TACs were generated using Pmod and the absorbed radiation doses were calculated using Olinda 2.2. To compare with the conventional PET/CT, five points were sampled on uEXPLORER's TACs to mimic the result of a short-axis PET/CT (15 cm axial FOV, consisted of 9 or 10 bed positions). Then the TACs were obtained using the multi-exponential fitting method, and the residence time and radiation dose were also calculated and compared with uEXPLORER. The highest absorbed organ doses were the pancreas, thyroid, spleen, heart wall, and kidneys for the male. For the female, the first five highest absorbed organ dose coefficients were the pancreas, heart wall, spleen, lungs, and kidneys. The lowest absorbed dose was found in red marrow both for male and female. The simulated short-axis PET can fit TACs well for the gradually-changed uptake organs but typically underestimated for the rapid-uptake organs during the first-10 min, resulting in errors in the calculated radiation dose. uEXPLORER PET/CT can measure N-ammonia's TACs simultaneously in all organs of the whole body, which can provide more accurate biodistribution and radiation dose estimation compared with the conventional short-axis scanners.
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ISSN:0094-2405
2473-4209
2473-4209
DOI:10.1002/mp.16450