PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

The impact of atlas-based MR attenuation correction on the diagnosis of FDG-PET/MR for Alzheimer's diseases- A simulation study combining multi-center data and ADNI-data.

  • Tetsuro Sekine,
  • Alfred Buck,
  • Gaspar Delso,
  • Bradley Kemp,
  • Edwin E G W Ter Voert,
  • Martin Huellner,
  • Patrick Veit-Haibach,
  • Sandeep Kaushik,
  • Florian Wiesinger,
  • Geoffrey Warnock,
  • Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0233886
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 6
p. e0233886

Abstract

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BACKGROUND:The purpose of this study was to assess the impact of vendor-provided atlas-based MRAC on FDG PET/MR for the evaluation of Alzheimer's disease (AD) by using simulated images. METHODS:We recruited 47 patients, from two institutions, who underwent PET/CT and PET/MR (GE SIGNA) examination for oncological staging. From the PET raw data acquired on PET/MR, two FDG-PET series were generated, using vendor-provided MRAC (atlas-based) and CTAC. The following simulation steps were performed in MNI space: After spatial normalization and smoothing of the PET datasets, we calculated the error map for each patient, PETMRAC/PETCTAC. We multiplied each of these 47 error maps with each of the 203 Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) cases after the identical normalization and smoothing. This resulted in 203*47 = 9541 datasets. To evaluate the probability of AD in each resulting image, a cumulative t-value was calculated automatically using commercially-available software (PMOD PALZ) which has been used in multiple large cohort studies. The diagnostic accuracy for the discrimination of AD and predicting progression from mild cognitive impairment (MCI) to AD were evaluated in simulated images compared with ADNI original images. RESULTS:The accuracy and specificity for the discrimination of AD-patients from normal controls were not substantially impaired, but sensitivity was slightly impaired in 5 out of 47 datasets (original vs. error; 83.2% [CI 75.0%-89.0%], 83.3% [CI 74.2%-89.8%] and 83.1% [CI 75.6%-88.3%] vs. 82.7% [range 80.4-85.0%], 78.5% [range 72.9-83.3%,] and 86.1% [range 81.4-89.8%]). The accuracy, sensitivity and specificity for predicting progression from MCI to AD during 2-year follow-up was not impaired (original vs. error; 62.5% [CI 53.3%-69.3%], 78.8% [CI 65.4%-88.6%] and 54.0% [CI 47.0%-69.1%] vs. 64.8% [range 61.5-66.7%], 75.7% [range 66.7-81.8%,] and 59.0% [range 50.8-63.5%]). The worst 3 error maps show a tendency towards underestimation of PET scores. CONCLUSION:FDG-PET/MR based on atlas-based MR attenuation correction showed similar diagnostic accuracy to the CT-based method for the diagnosis of AD and the prediction of progression of MCI to AD using commercially-available software, although with a minor reduction in sensitivity.