The impact of reconstruction and scanner characterization on the diagnostic capability of a normal database for [123I]FP-CIT SPECT imaging.

Background: The use of a normal database for [123I]FP-CIT SPECT imaging has been found to be helpful for cases
which are difficult to interpret by visual assessment alone, and to improve reproducibility in scan interpretation. The
aim of this study was to assess whether the use of different tomographic reconstructions affects the performance
of a normal [123I]FP-CIT SPECT database and also whether systems benefit from a system characterisation before a
database is used.
Seventy-seven [123I]FP-CIT SPECT studies from two sites and with 3-year clinical follow-up were assessed
quantitatively for scan normality using the ENC-DAT normal database obtained in well-documented healthy
subjects. Patient and normal data were reconstructed with iterative reconstruction with correction for attenuation,
scatter and septal penetration (ACSC), the same reconstruction without corrections (IRNC), and filtered backprojection
(FBP) with data quantified using small volume-of-interest (VOI) (BRASS) and large VOI (Southampton)
analysis methods. Test performance was assessed with and without system characterisation, using receiver
operating characteristics (ROC) analysis for age-independent data and using sensitivity/specificity analysis with
age-matched normal values. The clinical diagnosis at follow-up was used as the standard of truth.
Results: There were no significant differences in the age-independent quantitative assessment of scan normality
across reconstructions, system characterisation and quantitative methods (ROC AUC 0.866-0.924). With BRASS
quantification, there were no significant differences between the values of sensitivity (67.4-83.7%) or specificity
(79.4-91.2%) across all reconstruction and calibration strategies. However, the Southampton method showed
significant differences in sensitivity between ACSC (90.7%) vs IRNC (76.7%) and FBP (67.4%) reconstructions with
calibration. Sensitivity using ACSC reconstruction with this method was also significantly better with calibration than
without calibration (65.1%). Specificity using the Southampton method was unchanged across reconstruction and
calibration choices (82.4-88.2%).
Conclusions: The ability of a normal [123I]FP-CIT SPECT database to assess clinical scan normality is equivalent
across all reconstruction, system characterisation, and quantification strategies using BRASS quantification. However,
when using the Southampton quantification method, performance is sensitive to the reconstruction and calibration
strategy used.

Tipo Pubblicazione: 
Articolo
Author or Creator: 
Dickson JC
Tossici-Bolt L
Sera T
Booij J
Ziebell M
Morbelli S
Assenbaum-Nan S
Vander Borght T
Pagani M
Kapucu OL
Hesse S
Van Laere K
Darcourt J
Varrone A
Tatsch K
Publisher: 
Springer, Berlino/Germania, Germania
Source: 
European Journal of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging Research 7 (2017): 1–11. doi:10.1186/s13550-016-0253-0
info:cnr-pdr/source/autori:Dickson JC, Tossici-Bolt L, Sera T, Booij J, Ziebell M, Morbelli S, Assenbaum-Nan S, Vander Borght T, Pagani M, Kapucu OL, Hesse S, Van Laere K, Darcourt J, Varrone A, Tatsch K/titolo:The impact of reconstruction and scanner cha
Date: 
2017
Resource Identifier: 
http://www.cnr.it/prodotto/i/365883
https://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13550-016-0253-0
info:doi:10.1186/s13550-016-0253-0
Language: 
Eng
ISTC Author: 
Ritratto di Marco Pagani
Real name: