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- Longitudinal mouse-PET imaging: a reliable method for estimating binding parameters without a reference region or blood sampling
Longitudinal mouse-PET imaging: a reliable method for estimating binding parameters without a reference region or blood sampling
Authors
Catriona Wimberley, Duc Loc Nguyen, Charles Truillet, Marie-Anne Peyronneau, Zuhal Gulhan, Matteo Tonietto, Fawzi Boumezbeur, Raphael Boisgard, Sylvie Chalon, Viviane Bouilleret, Irène Buvat
Abstract
Abstract
Longitudinal mouse PET imaging is becoming increasingly popular due to the large number of transgenic and disease models available but faces challenges. These challenges are related to the small size of the mouse brain and the limited spatial resolution of microPET scanners, along with the small blood volume making arterial blood sampling challenging and impossible for longitudinal studies. The ability to extract an input function directly from the image would be useful for quantification in longitudinal small animal studies where there is no true reference region available such as TSPO imaging.
Methods
Using dynamic, whole-body
Results
The peaks of the IDIFs were strongly correlated with the injected dose (Pearson
Conclusion
We present a FA approach for IDIF extraction which is robust, reproducible and can be used in quantification methods for resolution recovery, denoising and parameter estimation. We demonstrated that the proposed quantification method yields parameter estimates closer to ex vivo measurements than semi-quantitative methods such as %ID and is immune to tracer binding in tissue unlike reference tissue methods. This approach allows for accurate quantification in longitudinal PET studies in mice while avoiding repeated blood sampling.
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