A review of recent works by our group in the segmentation and quantification of oncological lesions in 18-fluoro-deoxy-glucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) images is given, stressing the underlying model assumption. In a first approach, a targeted reconstruction strategy was set in the framework of linear space variant (LSV) reconstruction from projections. Resolution recovery by ordered subset expectation maximization (OSEM) from raw emission data was based on the Poissonian description of errors and on a parametric model of PET scanner space variant blurring. The targeted strategy estimates and refines lesion basis functions while freezing the rest of background in a single one, thus providing an estimate of lesion borders and uptake. In a second approach lesions are segmented on standard clinical images. Reconstructed images lose the original Poissonian features and are well fitted by Gaussian mixture models (GMM). However, this popular clustering method required a specific adaptation to lesion segmentation: constraint of the warm background based on GMM modeling of healthy tissue; proximity priors in the voxel-wise classification to extract connected object and increase noise robustness. In both approaches, the spill-out of high uptake organs in the lesion area was removed by means of appropriate models relying on the CT anatomy. Results obtained on digital and physical phantoms and on clinical datasets will be recalled.

Baselli, G., DE BERNARDI, E., Soffientini, C., Gianoli, C., Faggiano, E., Zito, F. (2016). Model based lesion segmentation in FDG-PET from raw data and clinical images. In 2016 IEEE 2nd International Forum on Research and Technologies for Society and Industry Leveraging a better Tomorrow (RTSI) (pp.211-215). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. [10.1109/RTSI.2016.7740585].

Model based lesion segmentation in FDG-PET from raw data and clinical images

DE BERNARDI, ELISABETTA
Secondo
;
2016

Abstract

A review of recent works by our group in the segmentation and quantification of oncological lesions in 18-fluoro-deoxy-glucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) images is given, stressing the underlying model assumption. In a first approach, a targeted reconstruction strategy was set in the framework of linear space variant (LSV) reconstruction from projections. Resolution recovery by ordered subset expectation maximization (OSEM) from raw emission data was based on the Poissonian description of errors and on a parametric model of PET scanner space variant blurring. The targeted strategy estimates and refines lesion basis functions while freezing the rest of background in a single one, thus providing an estimate of lesion borders and uptake. In a second approach lesions are segmented on standard clinical images. Reconstructed images lose the original Poissonian features and are well fitted by Gaussian mixture models (GMM). However, this popular clustering method required a specific adaptation to lesion segmentation: constraint of the warm background based on GMM modeling of healthy tissue; proximity priors in the voxel-wise classification to extract connected object and increase noise robustness. In both approaches, the spill-out of high uptake organs in the lesion area was removed by means of appropriate models relying on the CT anatomy. Results obtained on digital and physical phantoms and on clinical datasets will be recalled.
slide + paper
Lesions, Image reconstruction, Positron emission tomography, Image segmentation, Image resolution, Standards, Phantoms
English
IEEE International Forum on Research and Technologies for Society and Industry Leveraging a Better Tomorrow, RTSI 7- 9 September
2016
2016 IEEE 2nd International Forum on Research and Technologies for Society and Industry Leveraging a better Tomorrow (RTSI)
9781509011315
2016
211
215
7740585
none
Baselli, G., DE BERNARDI, E., Soffientini, C., Gianoli, C., Faggiano, E., Zito, F. (2016). Model based lesion segmentation in FDG-PET from raw data and clinical images. In 2016 IEEE 2nd International Forum on Research and Technologies for Society and Industry Leveraging a better Tomorrow (RTSI) (pp.211-215). Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc. [10.1109/RTSI.2016.7740585].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/138779
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