Improving the quantitation accuracy in noninvasive small animal single photon emission computed tomography imaging
Cheng, Dengfeng ; Rusckowski, Mary ; Pretorius, P. Hendrik ; Chen, Ling ; Xiao, Nan ; Liu, Yuxia ; Liu, Guozheng ; Liang, Min Min ; Liu, Xinrong ; Dou, Shuping ... show 1 more
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Student Authors
Faculty Advisor
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UMass Chan Affiliations
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Keywords
Indium Radioisotopes
Male
Multimodal Imaging
Phantoms, Imaging
Positron-Emission Tomography
Rats
Rats, Sprague-Dawley
Sensitivity and Specificity
Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
Quantitation
Single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT)
Molecular imaging
In-111
Antibody
Medicinal-Pharmaceutical Chemistry
Radiochemistry
Radiology
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Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Noninvasive imaging of small animals to measure biodistributions and pharmacokinetics of radiolabeled agents is increasingly seen as an effective alternative to external counting of tissues obtained by sacrifice and dissection. However, we have observed important disagreements in measuring the accumulation of (111)In-labeled antibodies in organs such as liver and kidneys when comparing imaging to ex vivo counting in the same animals. This study was conducted to establish whether this discrepancy could be minimized by selecting the region of interest (ROI) in images at the appropriate color threshold and by correcting for the estimated radioactivity within the blood pool of these organs during imaging.
METHODS: Vials with known concentrations of (111)In as phantoms were imaged on a Bioscan NanoSPECT/CT. Thereafter, an (111)In-DTPA-IgG antibody as the test agent was administered intravenously to normal rats, and whole body acquisitions were obtained at 2, 24 or 48 h. Immediately following imaging, the animals were sacrificed, the tissues were removed for ex vivo counting and the radioactivity accumulations were then compared.
RESULTS: The phantom measurements showed that accuracy depended upon setting the correct ROI and that, in turn, depended upon setting the appropriate threshold of the color scale. Under the most unfavorable conditions, this error did not exceed 60%. Compared to the results of ex vivo counting, quantitation by imaging provided high values in liver and kidneys at all three time points by as much as 140%. However, by using the blood radioactivity at the time of sacrifice and the known blood volume in these organs, the disagreement was reduced in all cases to below 25%.
CONCLUSION: In this study, the discrepancy in quantitating organ radioactivity accumulations between noninvasive imaging and necropsy was primarily due to blood pool radioactivity contributing to the in vivo images. The discrepancy may be minimized by subtracting an estimate of this contribution.
Source
Nucl Med Biol. 2011 Aug;38(6):843-8. Link to article on publisher's site