2019
DOI: 10.3389/fphy.2019.00136
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Clinically Valuable Quality Control for PET/MRI Systems: Consensus Recommendation From the HYBRID Consortium

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Cited by 14 publications
(20 citation statements)
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“…As clinical PET/MRI systems become more widely available there is a need for hybrid phantoms which allow assessment of system performance across multiple sites. Recent recommendations for a minimum set of QC procedres have been developed to ensure the proper functioning of whole-body PET/MRI systems (Valladares et al 2019) however these generally use separate phantoms for each modality and do not consider tissue equivalence. Chandramohan et al (2020) report the development of bone material analogues based on a gypsum plaster cement (CaSO 4 • 2H 2 O) that can be used in construction of phantoms for simultaneous PET/MRI systems.…”
Section: Pet/mrimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As clinical PET/MRI systems become more widely available there is a need for hybrid phantoms which allow assessment of system performance across multiple sites. Recent recommendations for a minimum set of QC procedres have been developed to ensure the proper functioning of whole-body PET/MRI systems (Valladares et al 2019) however these generally use separate phantoms for each modality and do not consider tissue equivalence. Chandramohan et al (2020) report the development of bone material analogues based on a gypsum plaster cement (CaSO 4 • 2H 2 O) that can be used in construction of phantoms for simultaneous PET/MRI systems.…”
Section: Pet/mrimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…All commercially available geometric phantoms featured in this review are phantoms initially designed for PET or Nuclear Medicine use and licensed by Data Spectrum Corporation: IEC (NEMA) Body Phantom Esser (ACR) PET Phantom Jaszczak Phantom NEMA 94 PET Phantom Mini Deluxe Phantom They are widely available and many sites with existing Nuclear Medicine and PET facilities are likely to already possess a subset of these phantoms in order to adhere to quality assurance guidelines [ 8 ]. In particular, the IEC (NEMA) Body Phantom continues to be recommended for PET and PET/MRI acceptance testing and quality assurance under the NEMA NU-2 (2018) standard [ 7 , 8 ]. It consists of a large, elliptical PMMA container with a central cylinder filled with polystyrene, around which hollow spheres are suspended from one end of the phantom.…”
Section: Geometric and Homogeneous Phantomsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This would act to both confirm the performance of these systems and to allow phantom testing to form part of wider imaging protocol validation projects. Additionally, there is little standardisation in MRI quality assurance programs [ 7 ], increasing the likelihood of cross-site variation in PET quantification given clinical reliance on MRI-based corrections. It is clear that more work is to be done in this area, either through alteration of MRI sequences used to generate phantom attenuation maps, or through the development of phantoms from materials exhibiting properties that allow for their visualisation in MRI acquisitions.…”
Section: Geometric and Homogeneous Phantomsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…As hybrid imaging modalities are inherently multimodal, it is essential for physicists with different areas of expertise to collaborate closely. This is perhaps the most obvious in the case of PET/MRI, where MRI physicists are needed for setting up the MR protocols for dedicated and whole-body data acquisition, while the PET physicists must handle the PET data processing (including MR-based attenuation correction) and image reconstruction aspects [61].…”
Section: Combined or Hybrid Imaging And Related Physicsmentioning
confidence: 99%