The overall goal of this proposal is to develop technology for the next generation of PET imaging instruments. Improved PET imaging technology promises to aid and support cancer research, diagnosis, and treatment, which should lead to improved health care and patient management. The new PET instrument will be based on Lanthanum Bromide scintillators capable of excellent energy resolution, spatial resolution, and time-of-flight (TOP) measurement. The TOP technique requires an accurate measurement of the time difference between the two 511 keV gamma rays which result from the positron annihilation of the radioactive isotope (e.g. 18F) tagged to the PET tracer. The TOP information reduces the inherent noise in image reconstruction, thereby improving image quality. Our proposal seeks to evaluate performance of whole-body TOP PET instrumentation that will also fulfill the necessary requirements of a modern imaging instrument in terms of cost-effectiveness and reliability. The basic technology for TOP is already under development, and so we have emphasized in this proposal an evaluation each aspect of the system, initially to optimize the new technology,' but ultimately to further develop these techniques for improved performance. Investigations will encompass the scintillation detector performance, the calibrations of the detector and stabilization of processing electronics, data correction techniques, and the image reconstruction algorithm. Our goal is to develop detectors with coincidence tinning resolution of 200 ps or better, with electronics that are stable and capable of matching this timing accuracy. We will develop list-mode TOP image reconstruction with modeling of physical effects, and also investigate faster, rebinning methods of reconstruction. We will study the impact of TOP on accuracy of quantification, which is important for both clinical and research PET studies of cancer, and evaluate SNR improvements with TOP. We will use methodologies that are predictive of the human's ability to identify and quantify activity uptake in lesions, thereby guiding the utilization of TOP PET for the study of cancer. ? ?

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Cancer Institute (NCI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01CA113941-01A1
Application #
7036157
Study Section
Biomedical Imaging Technology Study Section (BMIT)
Program Officer
Baker, Houston
Project Start
2006-04-07
Project End
2010-02-28
Budget Start
2006-04-07
Budget End
2007-02-28
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2006
Total Cost
$530,905
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pennsylvania
Department
Radiation-Diagnostic/Oncology
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
042250712
City
Philadelphia
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
19104
Krishnamoorthy, Srilalan; Blankemeyer, Eric; Mollet, Pieter et al. (2018) Performance evaluation of the MOLECUBES ?-CUBE-a high spatial resolution and high sensitivity small animal PET scanner utilizing monolithic LYSO scintillation detectors. Phys Med Biol 63:155013
Surti, S; Karp, J S (2018) Impact of event positioning algorithm on performance of a whole-body PET scanner using one-to-one coupled detectors. Phys Med Biol 63:055008
Panetta, Joseph V; Daube-Witherspoon, Margaret E; Karp, Joel S (2017) Validation of phantom-based harmonization for patient harmonization. Med Phys 44:3534-3544
Berker, Yannick; Karp, Joel S; Schulz, Volkmar (2017) Numerical algorithms for scatter-to-attenuation reconstruction in PET: empirical comparison of convergence, acceleration, and the effect of subsets. IEEE Trans Radiat Plasma Med Sci 1:426-434
Li, Yusheng; Matej, Samuel; Metzler, Scott D (2016) A unified Fourier theory for time-of-flight PET data. Phys Med Biol 61:601-24
Matej, Samuel; Daube-Witherspoon, Margaret E; Karp, Joel S (2016) Analytic TOF PET reconstruction algorithm within DIRECT data partitioning framework. Phys Med Biol 61:3365-86
Schmall, Jeffrey P; Karp, Joel S; Werner, Matt et al. (2016) Parallax error in long-axial field-of-view PET scanners-a simulation study. Phys Med Biol 61:5443-5455
Surti, Suleman; Karp, Joel S (2016) Advances in time-of-flight PET. Phys Med 32:12-22
Berker, Yannick; Li, Yusheng (2016) Attenuation correction in emission tomography using the emission data--A review. Med Phys 43:807-32
Li, Yusheng; Defrise, Michel; Matej, Samuel et al. (2016) Fourier rebinning and consistency equations for time-of-flight PET planograms. Inverse Probl 32:

Showing the most recent 10 out of 39 publications