The goal of the proposed research is to develop a combination of methods which will improve both tumor detection and the accuracy of biodistribution studies when monoclonal antibodies are used to image the abdomen with SPECT. To correct for the imaging of scattered photons, we propose to refine the dual photopeak window (DPW) method. DPW uses a regression relation between the scatter fraction and the ratio of counts between two, non-overlapping windows positioned over the photopeak to estimate the counts due to scatter at each pixel. We propose to achieve, by using Monte Carlo methods, an investigation of the underlying assumptions of this method, optimization of window placement, and design of the low-pass filter used to control noise in the estimated scatter distribution. To correct for attenuation in a uniform medium, and decrease the variation in spatial resolution with distance from the collimator, we propose the extension from 2D to 3D of the simultaneous correction algorithm (SCA). With use of DPW and SCA, the 3D modulation transfer function (MTF) will be approximately stationary. Thus, the third method we propose to investigate will be stationary, 2D pre- and 3D post-reconstruction restoration filters. These filters will balance the suppression of image noise against the restoration of spatial resolution according to the criterion used in designing the filter. The performance of these filters, according to the following physical measures of image quality, shall be determined: 1) FWHM, FWTM, and 3D MTF; 2) contrast recovery of """"""""cold"""""""" lesions; 3) contrast recovery of """"""""hot"""""""" lesions; 4) fractional standard deviation in voxel count; and 5) mean square error compared to known truth. A Monte Carlo simulation of SPECT abdominal imaging will be developed and used to test the performance of the methods for """"""""hot"""""""" and """"""""cold"""""""" tumor detection in the liver as judged using the Hotelling trace model observer. An ROC study of tumor detection using a standard reconstruction method, and three combinations of the method selected based on the results of the Hotelling trace observer, will be conducted to quantitate the difference in the detection of tumors which occurs with use of these methods by human observers. The methods will also be assessed in terms of their ability to quantitate activity accurately in phantoms.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
2R01CA042165-04A1
Application #
3183064
Study Section
Diagnostic Radiology Study Section (RNM)
Project Start
1987-07-01
Project End
1995-05-31
Budget Start
1991-09-01
Budget End
1992-05-31
Support Year
4
Fiscal Year
1991
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Massachusetts Medical School Worcester
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
660735098
City
Worcester
State
MA
Country
United States
Zip Code
01655
King, Michael; Farncombe, Troy (2003) An overview of attenuation and scatter correction of planar and SPECT data for dosimetry studies. Cancer Biother Radiopharm 18:181-90
King, Michael A; Pretorius, P Hendrik; Farncombe, Troy et al. (2002) Introduction to the physics of molecular imaging with radioactive tracers in small animals. J Cell Biochem Suppl 39:221-30
Wells, R G; King, M A; Simkin, P H et al. (2000) Comparing filtered backprojection and ordered-subsets expectation maximization for small-lesion detection and localization in 67Ga SPECT. J Nucl Med 41:1391-9
Gifford, H C; King, M A; de Vries, D J et al. (2000) Channelized hotelling and human observer correlation for lesion detection in hepatic SPECT imaging. J Nucl Med 41:514-21
Gifford, H C; King, M A; Wells, R G et al. (2000) LROC analysis of detector-response compensation in SPECT. IEEE Trans Med Imaging 19:463-73
Wells, R G; Simkin, P H; Judy, P F et al. (1999) Effect of filtering on the detection and localization of small Ga-67 lesions in thoracic single photon emission computed tomography images. Med Phys 26:1382-8
de Vries, D J; King, M A; Soares, E J et al. (1999) Effects of scatter substraction on detection and quantitation in hepatic SPECT. J Nucl Med 40:1011-23
Pretorius, P H; King, M A; Pan, T S et al. (1998) Reducing the influence of the partial volume effect on SPECT activity quantitation with 3D modelling of spatial resolution in iterative reconstruction. Phys Med Biol 43:407-20
Ljungberg, M; King, M A; Hademenos, G J et al. (1994) Comparison of four scatter correction methods using Monte Carlo simulated source distributions. J Nucl Med 35:143-51
Glick, S J; Hawkins, W G; King, M A et al. (1992) The effect of intrinsic attenuation correction methods on the stationarity of the 3-D modulation transfer function of SPECT. Med Phys 19:1105-12

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