19 research outputs found

    The “Carbonyl Story” and Beyond; Experiences, Lessons and Implications

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    The complex [99m Tc(OH2 )3 (CO)3 ]+ has become a versatile building block in radiopharmaceutical chemistry, applied by many groups worldwide. However, despite widespread efforts, only one compound has made it right the way through clinical trials. Along the way from its discovery to its development into an eventual product, the author experienced issues that he would handle differently in retrospect. In this article, these experiences are turned into "lessons" that might be helpful for young researchers finding themselves in similar situations. Beside issues with patenting and company strategies, the carbonyl story has provided scientific implications beyond its own story, and insights from which any future 99m Tc-based chemistry for radiopharmacy or molecular imaging might benefit

    Factors affecting accuracy of S values and determination of time-integrated activity in clinical Lu-177 dosimetry

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    IntroductionIn any radiotherapy, the absorbed dose needs to be estimated based on two factors, the time-integrated activity of the administered radiopharmaceutical and the patient-specific dose kernel. In this study, we consider the uncertainty with which such absorbed dose estimation can be achieved in a clinical environment.MethodsTo calculate the total error of dose estimation we considered the following aspects: The error resulting from computing the time-integrated activity, the difference between the S-value and the patient specific full Monte Carlo simulation, the error from segmenting the volume-of-interest (kidney) and the intrinsic error of the activimeter.ResultsThe total relative error in dose estimation can amount to 25.0% and is composed of the error of the time-integrated activity 17.1%, the error of the S-value 16.7%, the segmentation error 5.4% and the activimeter accuracy 5.0%.ConclusionErrors from estimating the time-integrated activity and approximations applied to dose kernel computations contribute about equally and represent the dominant contributions far exceeding the contributions from VOI segmentation and activimeter accuracy

    A comparison of methods for adapting 177Lu^{177}{\rm Lu} dose-voxel-kernels to tissue inhomogeneities

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    In-177 Lu radionuclide therapies, dosimetry is used for determining patient-individual dose burden. Standard approaches provide whole organ doses only. For assessing dose heterogeneity inside organs, voxel-wise dosimetry based on 3D SPECT/CT imaging could be applied. Often, this is achieved by convolving voxel-wise time-activity-curves with appropriate dose-voxel-kernels (DVK). The DVKs are meant to model dose deposition, and can be more accurate if modelled for the specific tissue type under consideration. In literature, DVKs are often not adapted to these inhomogeneities, or simple approximation schemes are applied. For 26 patients, which had previously undergone a Lu-177 -PSMA or -DOTATOC therapy, decay maps, mass-density maps as well as tissue-type maps were derived from SPECT/CT acquisitions. These were used for a voxel-based dosimetry based on convolution with DVKs (each of size (4.8 mm)(3)) obtained by four different DVK methods proposed in literature. The simplest only considers a spatially constant soft-tissue DVK (herein named 'constant' while others either take into account only the local density of the center voxel of the DVK (herein named 'center-voxel') or scale each voxel linearly according to the proper mass density deduced from the CT image (herein named 'density') or considered both the local mass density as well as the direct path between the center voxel and any voxel in its surrounding (herein named 'percentage' ). Deviations between resulting dose values and those from full Monte-Carlo simulations (MC simulations) were compared for selected organs and tissue-types. For each DVK method, inter-patient variability was considerable showing both under- and overestimation of energy dose compared to the MC result for all tissue densities higher than soft tissue. In kidneys and spleen, 'constant' and 'density' -scaled DVKs achieved estimated doses with smallest deviations to the full MC gold standard (similar to 5%-8% underestimation). For low and high density tissue types such as lung and adipose or bone tissue, alternative DVK methods like 'center-voxel' - and 'percentage' - scaled achieved superior results, respectively. Concerning computational load, dose estimation with the DVK method 'constant' needs about 1.1 s per patient, center-voxel scaling amounts to 1.2 s, density scaling needs 1.4 s while percentage scaling consumes 860.3 s per patient. In this study encompassing a large patient cohort and four different DVK estimation methods, no single DVK-adaption method was consistently better than any other in case of soft tissue kernels. Hence in such cases the simplest DVK method, labeled 'constant', suffices. In case of tumors, often located in tissues of low (lung) or high (bone) density, more sophisticated DVK methods excel. The high inter-patient variability indicates that for evaluating new algorithms, a sufficiently large patient cohort needs to be involved

    A deep learning approach to radiation dose estimation

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    Currently methods for predicting absorbed dose after administering a radiopharmaceutical are rather crude in daily clinical practice. Most importantly, individual tissue density distributions as well as local variations of the concentration of the radiopharmaceutical are commonly neglected. The current study proposes machine learning techniques like Green's function-based empirical mode decomposition and deep learning methods on U-net architectures in conjunction with soft tissue kernel Monte Carlo (MC) simulations to overcome current limitations in precision and reliability of dose estimations for clinical dosimetric applications. We present a hybrid method (DNN-EMD) based on deep neural networks (DNN) in combination with empirical mode decomposition (EMD) techniques. The algorithm receives x-ray computed tomography (CT) tissue density maps and dose maps, estimated according to the MIRD protocol, i.e. employing whole organ S-values and related time-integrated activities (TIAs), and from measured SPECT distributions of Lu-177 radionuclei, and learns to predict individual absorbed dose distributions. In a second step, density maps are replaced by their intrinsic modes as deduced from an EMD analysis. The system is trained using individual full MC simulation results as reference. Data from a patient cohort of 26 subjects are reported in this study. The proposed methods were validated employing a leave-one-out cross-validation technique. Deviations of estimated dose from corresponding MC results corroborate a superior performance of the newly proposed hybrid DNN-EMD method compared to its related MIRD DVK dose calculation. Not only are the mean deviations much smaller with the new method, but also the related variances are much reduced. If intrinsic modes of the tissue density maps are input to the algorithm, variances become even further reduced though the mean deviations are less affected. The newly proposed hybrid DNN-EMD method for individualized radiation dose prediction outperforms the MIRD DVK dose calculation method. It is fast enough to be of use in daily clinical practice

    Number of necessary training examples for Neural Networks with different number of trainable parameters

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    In this work, the network complexity should be reduced with a concomitant reduction in the number of necessary training examples. The focus thus was on the dependence of proper evaluation metrics on the number of adjustable parameters of the considered deep neural network. The used data set encompassed Hematoxylin and Eosin (H&E) colored cell images provided by various clinics. We used a deep convolutional neural network to get the relation between a model’s complexity, its concomitant set of parameters, and the size of the training sample necessary to achieve a certain classification accuracy. The complexity of the deep neural networks was reduced by pruning a certain amount of filters in the network. As expected, the unpruned neural network showed best performance. The network with the highest number of trainable parameter achieved, within the estimated standard error of the optimized cross-entropy loss, best results up to 30% pruning. Strongly pruned networks are highly viable and the classification accuracy declines quickly with decreasing number of training patterns. However, up to a pruning ratio of 40%, we found a comparable performance of pruned and unpruned deep convolutional neural networks (DCNN) and densely connected convolutional networks (DCCN)
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