RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Characterization of 3-Dimensional PET Systems for Accurate Quantification of Myocardial Blood Flow JF Journal of Nuclear Medicine JO J Nucl Med FD Society of Nuclear Medicine SP 103 OP 109 DO 10.2967/jnumed.116.174565 VO 58 IS 1 A1 Jennifer M. Renaud A1 Kathy Yip A1 Jean Guimond A1 Mikaël Trottier A1 Philippe Pibarot A1 Eric Turcotte A1 Conor Maguire A1 Lucille Lalonde A1 Karen Gulenchyn A1 Troy Farncombe A1 Gerald Wisenberg A1 Jonathan Moody A1 Benjamin Lee A1 Steven C. Port A1 Timothy G. Turkington A1 Rob S. Beanlands A1 Robert A. deKemp YR 2017 UL http://jnm.snmjournals.org/content/58/1/103.abstract AB Three-dimensional (3D) mode imaging is the current standard for PET/CT systems. Dynamic imaging for quantification of myocardial blood flow with short-lived tracers, such as 82Rb-chloride, requires accuracy to be maintained over a wide range of isotope activities and scanner counting rates. We proposed new performance standard measurements to characterize the dynamic range of PET systems for accurate quantitative imaging. Methods: 82Rb or 13N-ammonia (1,100–3,000 MBq) was injected into the heart wall insert of an anthropomorphic torso phantom. A decaying isotope scan was obtained over 5 half-lives on 9 different 3D PET/CT systems and 1 3D/2-dimensional PET-only system. Dynamic images (28 × 15 s) were reconstructed using iterative algorithms with all corrections enabled. Dynamic range was defined as the maximum activity in the myocardial wall with less than 10% bias, from which corresponding dead-time, counting rates, and/or injected activity limits were established for each scanner. Scatter correction residual bias was estimated as the maximum cavity blood–to–myocardium activity ratio. Image quality was assessed via the coefficient of variation measuring nonuniformity of the left ventricular myocardium activity distribution. Results: Maximum recommended injected activity/body weight, peak dead-time correction factor, counting rates, and residual scatter bias for accurate cardiac myocardial blood flow imaging were 3–14 MBq/kg, 1.5–4.0, 22–64 Mcps singles and 4–14 Mcps prompt coincidence counting rates, and 2%–10% on the investigated scanners. Nonuniformity of the myocardial activity distribution varied from 3% to 16%. Conclusion: Accurate dynamic imaging is possible on the 10 3D PET systems if the maximum injected MBq/kg values are respected to limit peak dead-time losses during the bolus first-pass transit.