5 research outputs found
Results of the first user program on the Homogenous Thermal Neutron Source HOTNES (ENEA / INFN)
The HOmogeneous Thermal NEutron Source (HOTNES) is a new type of thermal
neutron irradiation assembly developed by the ENEA-INFN collaboration. The
facility is fully characterized in terms of neutron field and dosimetric
quantities, by either computational and experimental methods. This paper
reports the results of the first "HOTNES users program", carried out in 2016,
and covering a variety of thermal neutron active detectors such as
scintillators, solid-state, single crystal diamond and gaseous detectors
Ultra-low dose whole-body CT for attenuation correction in a dual tracer PET/CT protocol for multiple myeloma
Purpose: To investigate within phantoms the minimum CT dose allowed for accurate attenuation correction of
PET data and to quantify the effective dose reduction when a CT for this purpose is incorporated in the clinical
setting.
Methods: The NEMA image quality phantom was scanned within a large parallelepiped container. Twenty-one
different CT images were acquired to correct attenuation of PET raw data. Radiation dose and image quality
were evaluated.
Thirty-one patients with proven multiple myeloma who underwent a dual tracer PET/CT scan were retrospec-
tively reviewed. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT included a diagnostic whole-body low dose CT (WBLDCT: 120
kV-80mAs) and 11C-Methionine PET/CT included a whole-body ultra-low dose CT (WBULDCT) for attenuation
correction (100 kV-40mAs). Effective dose and image quality were analysed.
Results: Only the two lowest radiation dose conditions (80 kV-20mAs and 80 kV-10mAs) produced artifacts in CT
images that degraded corrected PET images. For all the other conditions (CTDIvol ≥ 0.43 mGy), PET contrast
recovery coefficients varied less than ± 1.2%.
Patients received a median dose of 6.4 mSv from diagnostic CT and 2.1 mSv from the attenuation correction CT.
Despite the worse image quality of this CT, 94.8% of bone lesions were identifiable.
Conclusion: Phantom experiments showed that an ultra-low dose CT can be implemented in PET/CT procedures
without any noticeable degradation in the attenuation corrected PET scan. The replacement of the standard CT
for this ultra-low dose CT in clinical PET/CT scans involves a significant radiation dose reductio
Ultra-low dose whole-body CT for attenuation correction in a dual tracer PET/CT protocol for multiple myeloma
Purpose: To investigate within phantoms the minimum CT dose allowed for accurate attenuation correction of
PET data and to quantify the effective dose reduction when a CT for this purpose is incorporated in the clinical
setting.
Methods: The NEMA image quality phantom was scanned within a large parallelepiped container. Twenty-one
different CT images were acquired to correct attenuation of PET raw data. Radiation dose and image quality
were evaluated.
Thirty-one patients with proven multiple myeloma who underwent a dual tracer PET/CT scan were retrospec-
tively reviewed. 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT included a diagnostic whole-body low dose CT (WBLDCT: 120
kV-80mAs) and 11C-Methionine PET/CT included a whole-body ultra-low dose CT (WBULDCT) for attenuation
correction (100 kV-40mAs). Effective dose and image quality were analysed.
Results: Only the two lowest radiation dose conditions (80 kV-20mAs and 80 kV-10mAs) produced artifacts in CT
images that degraded corrected PET images. For all the other conditions (CTDIvol ≥ 0.43 mGy), PET contrast
recovery coefficients varied less than ± 1.2%.
Patients received a median dose of 6.4 mSv from diagnostic CT and 2.1 mSv from the attenuation correction CT.
Despite the worse image quality of this CT, 94.8% of bone lesions were identifiable.
Conclusion: Phantom experiments showed that an ultra-low dose CT can be implemented in PET/CT procedures
without any noticeable degradation in the attenuation corrected PET scan. The replacement of the standard CT
for this ultra-low dose CT in clinical PET/CT scans involves a significant radiation dose reductio