European Radiology Experimental (Feb 2024)

Empowering PET: harnessing deep learning for improved clinical insight

  • Alessia Artesani,
  • Alessandro Bruno,
  • Fabrizia Gelardi,
  • Arturo Chiti

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s41747-023-00413-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract This review aims to take a journey into the transformative impact of artificial intelligence (AI) on positron emission tomography (PET) imaging. To this scope, a broad overview of AI applications in the field of nuclear medicine and a thorough exploration of deep learning (DL) implementations in cancer diagnosis and therapy through PET imaging will be presented. We firstly describe the behind-the-scenes use of AI for image generation, including acquisition (event positioning, noise reduction though time-of-flight estimation and scatter correction), reconstruction (data-driven and model-driven approaches), restoration (supervised and unsupervised methods), and motion correction. Thereafter, we outline the integration of AI into clinical practice through the applications to segmentation, detection and classification, quantification, treatment planning, dosimetry, and radiomics/radiogenomics combined to tumour biological characteristics. Thus, this review seeks to showcase the overarching transformation of the field, ultimately leading to tangible improvements in patient treatment and response assessment. Finally, limitations and ethical considerations of the AI application to PET imaging and future directions of multimodal data mining in this discipline will be briefly discussed, including pressing challenges to the adoption of AI in molecular imaging such as the access to and interoperability of huge amount of data as well as the “black-box” problem, contributing to the ongoing dialogue on the transformative potential of AI in nuclear medicine. Relevance statement AI is rapidly revolutionising the world of medicine, including the fields of radiology and nuclear medicine. In the near future, AI will be used to support healthcare professionals. These advances will lead to improvements in diagnosis, in the assessment of response to treatment, in clinical decision making and in patient management. Key points • Applying AI has the potential to enhance the entire PET imaging pipeline. • AI may support several clinical tasks in both PET diagnosis and prognosis. • Interpreting the relationships between imaging and multiomics data will heavily rely on AI. Graphical Abstract

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