RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Optimization of Injected Dose Based on Noise Equivalent Count Rates for 2- and 3-Dimensional Whole-Body PET JF Journal of Nuclear Medicine JO J Nucl Med FD Society of Nuclear Medicine SP 1268 OP 1278 VO 43 IS 9 A1 Carole Lartizien A1 Claude Comtat A1 Paul E. Kinahan A1 Nuno Ferreira A1 Bernard Bendriem A1 Régine Trébossen YR 2002 UL http://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/43/9/1268.abstract AB The noise equivalent count (NEC) rate index is used to derive guidelines on the optimal injected dose to the patient for 2-dimensional (2D) and 3-dimensional (3D) whole-body PET acquisitions. Methods: We performed 2D and 3D whole-body acquisitions of an anthropomorphic phantom modeling the conditions for 18F-FDG PET of the torso and measured the NEC rates for different activity levels for several organs of interest. The correlations between count rates measured from the phantom and those from a series of whole-body patient scans were then analyzed. This analysis allowed validation of our approach and estimation of the injected dose that maximizes NEC rate as a function of patient morphology for both acquisition modes. Results: Variations of the phantom and patient prompt and random coincidence rates as a function of single-photon rates correlated well. On the basis of these correlations, we demonstrated that the patient NEC rate can be predicted for a given single-photon rate. Finally, we determined that patient single-photon rates correlated with the mean dose per weight at acquisition start when normalized by the body mass index. This correlation allows modifying the injected dose as a function of patient body mass index to reach the peak NEC rate in 3D mode. Conversely, we found that the peak NEC rates were never reached in 2D mode within an acceptable range of injected dose. Conclusion: The injected dose was adapted to patient morphology for 2D and 3D whole-body acquisitions using the NEC rate as a figure of merit of the statistical quality of the sinogram data. This study is a first step toward a more comprehensive comparison of the image quality obtained using both acquisition modes.