6 research outputs found

    Full-dose PET Synthesis from Low-dose PET Using High-efficiency Diffusion Denoising Probabilistic Model

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    To reduce the risks associated with ionizing radiation, a reduction of radiation exposure in PET imaging is needed. However, this leads to a detrimental effect on image contrast and quantification. High-quality PET images synthesized from low-dose data offer a solution to reduce radiation exposure. We introduce a diffusion-model-based approach for estimating full-dose PET images from low-dose ones: the PET Consistency Model (PET-CM) yielding synthetic quality comparable to state-of-the-art diffusion-based synthesis models, but with greater efficiency. There are two steps: a forward process that adds Gaussian noise to a full dose PET image at multiple timesteps, and a reverse diffusion process that employs a PET Shifted-window Vision Transformer (PET-VIT) network to learn the denoising procedure conditioned on the corresponding low-dose PETs. In PET-CM, the reverse process learns a consistency function for direct denoising of Gaussian noise to a clean full-dose PET. We evaluated the PET-CM in generating full-dose images using only 1/8 and 1/4 of the standard PET dose. Comparing 1/8 dose to full-dose images, PET-CM demonstrated impressive performance with normalized mean absolute error (NMAE) of 1.233+/-0.131%, peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) of 33.915+/-0.933dB, structural similarity index (SSIM) of 0.964+/-0.009, and normalized cross-correlation (NCC) of 0.968+/-0.011, with an average generation time of 62 seconds per patient. This is a significant improvement compared to the state-of-the-art diffusion-based model with PET-CM reaching this result 12x faster. In the 1/4 dose to full-dose image experiments, PET-CM is also competitive, achieving an NMAE 1.058+/-0.092%, PSNR of 35.548+/-0.805dB, SSIM of 0.978+/-0.005, and NCC 0.981+/-0.007 The results indicate promising low-dose PET image quality improvements for clinical applications

    A cross-scanner and cross-tracer deep learning method for the recovery of standard-dose imaging quality from low-dose PET

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    PURPOSE: A critical bottleneck for the credibility of artificial intelligence (AI) is replicating the results in the diversity of clinical practice. We aimed to develop an AI that can be independently applied to recover high-quality imaging from low-dose scans on different scanners and tracers. METHODS: Brain [(18)F]FDG PET imaging of 237 patients scanned with one scanner was used for the development of AI technology. The developed algorithm was then tested on [(18)F]FDG PET images of 45 patients scanned with three different scanners, [(18)F]FET PET images of 18 patients scanned with two different scanners, as well as [(18)F]Florbetapir images of 10 patients. A conditional generative adversarial network (GAN) was customized for cross-scanner and cross-tracer optimization. Three nuclear medicine physicians independently assessed the utility of the results in a clinical setting. RESULTS: The improvement achieved by AI recovery significantly correlated with the baseline image quality indicated by structural similarity index measurement (SSIM) (r = −0.71, p < 0.05) and normalized dose acquisition (r = −0.60, p < 0.05). Our cross-scanner and cross-tracer AI methodology showed utility based on both physical and clinical image assessment (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION: The deep learning development for extensible application on unknown scanners and tracers may improve the trustworthiness and clinical acceptability of AI-based dose reduction. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s00259-021-05644-1
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