Technology Overcomes the Limitations of Traditional Bed-Based PET/CT
By MedImaging International staff writers Posted on 20 Jun 2013 |
New positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) technology provides continuous motion scanning for precise imaging, and eliminates doses related to overscanning, while achieving optimum efficiency.
At the 2013 annual meeting of the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) held June 8-12, 2013, in Vancouver (BC, Canada), Siemens Healthcare (Erlangen, Germany) presented the Biograph mCT Flow, a new positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) system that for the first time, overcomes the limitations of conventional bed-based PET/CT with FlowMotion, a cutting-edge new technology that moves the patient smoothly through the system’s gantry, while continuously capturing PET data.
Biograph mCT Flow with FlowMotion’s imaging protocols are based on the organ’s need. FlowMotion expands precise and reproducible quantification in all dimensions for detailed disease characterization in therapy monitoring, while enabling physicians to offer as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA) dose to every patient. Furthermore, the combination of a 78-cm bore with five-minute ultrafast scanning and a continuous feeling of progress throughout the scan provides the patient with a more comfortable scan experience. The new Biograph mCT Flow PET•CT system with FlowMotion technology demonstrates Siemens’ innovation and competitiveness—key components of the Healthcare Sector’s Agenda 2013 two-year initiative.
With traditional PET/CT scanners, planning and scanning is limited to the fixed size of the system’s detector field-of-view (FOV) for each bed position. Whereas the adjustment of scan parameters in clinical stop-and-go PET/CT protocols is technically possible, the complexity of adjustment has limited its routine use.
mCT Flow PET•CT with FlowMotion technology changes how PET imaging is performed, eliminating the need for stop-and-go, bed-based planning with planning and scanning based on the single continuous motion of the patient table. Without the limitations of bed positions, the technician can be easily adjust the examination parameters such as image resolution, speed, and motion management to the precise dimensions of organs and routinely incorporated into a single scan for every patient.
To help physicians make sound decisions, imaging must provide effective and reproducible quantification. Traditional PET/CT suffers from intrinsic sensitivity degradation from the center to the edge of the axial FOV. Overlapping sequential bed positions are employed to counteract for this limitation, but this approach can lead to axially varying noise sensitivity. This noise can distort the quantitative values of a detected lesion, which may prompt a physician to mischaracterize the severity of a tumor. By constantly moving the patient through the detection system, FlowMotion technology eliminates overlapping bed acquisitions and maintains uniform noise sensitivity across the entire scan range.
FlowMotion eliminates CT dose due to over-scanning by enabling the user to precisely define the beginning and end of the PET scan, and because the CT scan of Biograph mCT Flow begins and ends at the same points as the system’s PET scan, the patient is not irradiated in regions of the body that do not require a CT scan. With Biograph mCT Flow, the user can realize a CT dose decrease of up to 32%. Meanwhile, the new Biograph mCT Flow, combined with TrueV, is the only solution that enables continuous scanning at twice the speed of conventional PET/CT. TrueV technology provides a 30% wider axial FOV of 21.6 cm—the largest in the PET/CT industry—enabling Biograph mCT Flow to provide a 70% increase in count rate performance. When combined with ultraHD•PET, which provides increased image quality, routine clinical scans can be performed in five minutes. Throughput is further optimized by one click FAST planning. The user can employ a simple protocol setup to determine the scan type and duration for up to four zones: for example, the head, abdomen, lungs, and legs. The user can then tailor the scan in each region using Siemens’ established image quality techniques.
Healthcare providers require a system that accommodates the individual needs of a wide patient demographic. A standard PET/CT scan can last 25 to 30 minutes, with the patient frequently falling asleep or zoning out while the system acquires a bed position. When the bed shifts to the next scanning position, the patient is frequently alarmed, which results in an image that is flawed by motion artifacts. The patient also can feel anxiety during the lengthy scanning process, perceiving no progress until the bed shifts to a new scanning position.
In addition to the elimination of patient motion due to surprise, the continuously moving patient table of Biograph mCT Flow gives the patients a sense of progress, which can additionally optimize patient satisfaction. Moreover, the large 78-cm bore, short tunnel, and a 227-kg table capacity can improve patient accessibility and comfort.
Related Links:
Siemens Healthcare
At the 2013 annual meeting of the Society of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (SNMMI) held June 8-12, 2013, in Vancouver (BC, Canada), Siemens Healthcare (Erlangen, Germany) presented the Biograph mCT Flow, a new positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) system that for the first time, overcomes the limitations of conventional bed-based PET/CT with FlowMotion, a cutting-edge new technology that moves the patient smoothly through the system’s gantry, while continuously capturing PET data.
Biograph mCT Flow with FlowMotion’s imaging protocols are based on the organ’s need. FlowMotion expands precise and reproducible quantification in all dimensions for detailed disease characterization in therapy monitoring, while enabling physicians to offer as low as reasonably achievable (ALARA) dose to every patient. Furthermore, the combination of a 78-cm bore with five-minute ultrafast scanning and a continuous feeling of progress throughout the scan provides the patient with a more comfortable scan experience. The new Biograph mCT Flow PET•CT system with FlowMotion technology demonstrates Siemens’ innovation and competitiveness—key components of the Healthcare Sector’s Agenda 2013 two-year initiative.
With traditional PET/CT scanners, planning and scanning is limited to the fixed size of the system’s detector field-of-view (FOV) for each bed position. Whereas the adjustment of scan parameters in clinical stop-and-go PET/CT protocols is technically possible, the complexity of adjustment has limited its routine use.
mCT Flow PET•CT with FlowMotion technology changes how PET imaging is performed, eliminating the need for stop-and-go, bed-based planning with planning and scanning based on the single continuous motion of the patient table. Without the limitations of bed positions, the technician can be easily adjust the examination parameters such as image resolution, speed, and motion management to the precise dimensions of organs and routinely incorporated into a single scan for every patient.
To help physicians make sound decisions, imaging must provide effective and reproducible quantification. Traditional PET/CT suffers from intrinsic sensitivity degradation from the center to the edge of the axial FOV. Overlapping sequential bed positions are employed to counteract for this limitation, but this approach can lead to axially varying noise sensitivity. This noise can distort the quantitative values of a detected lesion, which may prompt a physician to mischaracterize the severity of a tumor. By constantly moving the patient through the detection system, FlowMotion technology eliminates overlapping bed acquisitions and maintains uniform noise sensitivity across the entire scan range.
FlowMotion eliminates CT dose due to over-scanning by enabling the user to precisely define the beginning and end of the PET scan, and because the CT scan of Biograph mCT Flow begins and ends at the same points as the system’s PET scan, the patient is not irradiated in regions of the body that do not require a CT scan. With Biograph mCT Flow, the user can realize a CT dose decrease of up to 32%. Meanwhile, the new Biograph mCT Flow, combined with TrueV, is the only solution that enables continuous scanning at twice the speed of conventional PET/CT. TrueV technology provides a 30% wider axial FOV of 21.6 cm—the largest in the PET/CT industry—enabling Biograph mCT Flow to provide a 70% increase in count rate performance. When combined with ultraHD•PET, which provides increased image quality, routine clinical scans can be performed in five minutes. Throughput is further optimized by one click FAST planning. The user can employ a simple protocol setup to determine the scan type and duration for up to four zones: for example, the head, abdomen, lungs, and legs. The user can then tailor the scan in each region using Siemens’ established image quality techniques.
Healthcare providers require a system that accommodates the individual needs of a wide patient demographic. A standard PET/CT scan can last 25 to 30 minutes, with the patient frequently falling asleep or zoning out while the system acquires a bed position. When the bed shifts to the next scanning position, the patient is frequently alarmed, which results in an image that is flawed by motion artifacts. The patient also can feel anxiety during the lengthy scanning process, perceiving no progress until the bed shifts to a new scanning position.
In addition to the elimination of patient motion due to surprise, the continuously moving patient table of Biograph mCT Flow gives the patients a sense of progress, which can additionally optimize patient satisfaction. Moreover, the large 78-cm bore, short tunnel, and a 227-kg table capacity can improve patient accessibility and comfort.
Related Links:
Siemens Healthcare
Latest Nuclear Medicine News
- Novel PET Imaging Approach Offers Never-Before-Seen View of Neuroinflammation
- Novel Radiotracer Identifies Biomarker for Triple-Negative Breast Cancer
- Innovative PET Imaging Technique to Help Diagnose Neurodegeneration
- New Molecular Imaging Test to Improve Lung Cancer Diagnosis
- Novel PET Technique Visualizes Spinal Cord Injuries to Predict Recovery
- Next-Gen Tau Radiotracers Outperform FDA-Approved Imaging Agents in Detecting Alzheimer’s
- Breakthrough Method Detects Inflammation in Body Using PET Imaging
- Advanced Imaging Reveals Hidden Metastases in High-Risk Prostate Cancer Patients
- Combining Advanced Imaging Technologies Offers Breakthrough in Glioblastoma Treatment
- New Molecular Imaging Agent Accurately Identifies Crucial Cancer Biomarker
- New Scans Light Up Aggressive Tumors for Better Treatment
- AI Stroke Brain Scan Readings Twice as Accurate as Current Method
- AI Analysis of PET/CT Images Predicts Side Effects of Immunotherapy in Lung Cancer
- New Imaging Agent to Drive Step-Change for Brain Cancer Imaging
- Portable PET Scanner to Detect Earliest Stages of Alzheimer’s Disease
- New Immuno-PET Imaging Technique Identifies Glioblastoma Patients Who Would Benefit from Immunotherapy
Channels
Radiography
view channel
World's Largest Class Single Crystal Diamond Radiation Detector Opens New Possibilities for Diagnostic Imaging
Diamonds possess ideal physical properties for radiation detection, such as exceptional thermal and chemical stability along with a quick response time. Made of carbon with an atomic number of six, diamonds... Read more
AI-Powered Imaging Technique Shows Promise in Evaluating Patients for PCI
Percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI), also known as coronary angioplasty, is a minimally invasive procedure where small metal tubes called stents are inserted into partially blocked coronary arteries... Read moreMRI
view channel
AI Tool Tracks Effectiveness of Multiple Sclerosis Treatments Using Brain MRI Scans
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a condition in which the immune system attacks the brain and spinal cord, leading to impairments in movement, sensation, and cognition. Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) markers... Read more
Ultra-Powerful MRI Scans Enable Life-Changing Surgery in Treatment-Resistant Epileptic Patients
Approximately 360,000 individuals in the UK suffer from focal epilepsy, a condition in which seizures spread from one part of the brain. Around a third of these patients experience persistent seizures... Read more
AI-Powered MRI Technology Improves Parkinson’s Diagnoses
Current research shows that the accuracy of diagnosing Parkinson’s disease typically ranges from 55% to 78% within the first five years of assessment. This is partly due to the similarities shared by Parkinson’s... Read more
Biparametric MRI Combined with AI Enhances Detection of Clinically Significant Prostate Cancer
Artificial intelligence (AI) technologies are transforming the way medical images are analyzed, offering unprecedented capabilities in quantitatively extracting features that go beyond traditional visual... Read moreUltrasound
view channel
AI Identifies Heart Valve Disease from Common Imaging Test
Tricuspid regurgitation is a condition where the heart's tricuspid valve does not close completely during contraction, leading to backward blood flow, which can result in heart failure. A new artificial... Read more
Novel Imaging Method Enables Early Diagnosis and Treatment Monitoring of Type 2 Diabetes
Type 2 diabetes is recognized as an autoimmune inflammatory disease, where chronic inflammation leads to alterations in pancreatic islet microvasculature, a key factor in β-cell dysfunction.... Read moreGeneral/Advanced Imaging
view channel
AI-Powered Imaging System Improves Lung Cancer Diagnosis
Given the need to detect lung cancer at earlier stages, there is an increasing need for a definitive diagnostic pathway for patients with suspicious pulmonary nodules. However, obtaining tissue samples... Read more
AI Model Significantly Enhances Low-Dose CT Capabilities
Lung cancer remains one of the most challenging diseases, making early diagnosis vital for effective treatment. Fortunately, advancements in artificial intelligence (AI) are revolutionizing lung cancer... Read moreImaging IT
view channel
New Google Cloud Medical Imaging Suite Makes Imaging Healthcare Data More Accessible
Medical imaging is a critical tool used to diagnose patients, and there are billions of medical images scanned globally each year. Imaging data accounts for about 90% of all healthcare data1 and, until... Read more
Global AI in Medical Diagnostics Market to Be Driven by Demand for Image Recognition in Radiology
The global artificial intelligence (AI) in medical diagnostics market is expanding with early disease detection being one of its key applications and image recognition becoming a compelling consumer proposition... Read moreIndustry News
view channel
GE HealthCare and NVIDIA Collaboration to Reimagine Diagnostic Imaging
GE HealthCare (Chicago, IL, USA) has entered into a collaboration with NVIDIA (Santa Clara, CA, USA), expanding the existing relationship between the two companies to focus on pioneering innovation in... Read more
Patient-Specific 3D-Printed Phantoms Transform CT Imaging
New research has highlighted how anatomically precise, patient-specific 3D-printed phantoms are proving to be scalable, cost-effective, and efficient tools in the development of new CT scan algorithms... Read more
Siemens and Sectra Collaborate on Enhancing Radiology Workflows
Siemens Healthineers (Forchheim, Germany) and Sectra (Linköping, Sweden) have entered into a collaboration aimed at enhancing radiologists' diagnostic capabilities and, in turn, improving patient care... Read more