A CT assisted method for absolute quantitation of internal radioactivity

Abstract
A method is described for the determination of radioactivity (microCi or MBq) at an organ site within an object or patient. Using both anatomic image data (CT or MRI scans) and planar gamma camera images, activity at depth is determined using a matrix inversion method based on least squares. The result of the inversion analysis was the unknown set of n linear (uniform) activity densities representative of each organ within the phantom or patient. The problem was overdetermined since the number of unknown activity densities (microCi/cm) was much less than the number of analysis points (N) within the nuclear image. This method, defined as the CT assisted matrix inversion (CAMI) technique, was accurate to within 15% for a three "organ" plastic phantom, wherein the organs were right circular cylinders having activities of 74 to 508 microCi (or 2.74 MBq to 18.8 MBq). This accuracy included image quantitation effects, particularly assumptions concerning attenuation correction. The average absolute percent error of the estimated activity in four distinct radioactive volumes in the phantom was 9.8%. It was found that the background activity within the phantom was estimated to be too high if sampling regions near strong sources were used in the analysis (scatter effect). This was minimized by going at least 2 cm away from such sources. By applying the method to a monoclonal antibody clinical study, activities within the patient's major organs such as liver, spleen, and kidney could be estimated, even in cases where the organ could not be visualized. Here, the CAMI algorithm gave internally consistent results for the patient's left and right lung linear activity concentrations. The CAMI technique resolves the problem of tissue superimposition using depth information from 3-D CT and is applicable in cases where a number of organs overlap in the gamma camera image. Thus, the method should be generally useful to nuclear image quantitation and the estimation of absorbed radiation doses in patients. One particular application is the estimation of radiation doses in radioimmunotherapy (RIT).