Publication | Open Access
PET/MR in children. Initial clinical experience in paediatric oncology using an integrated PET/MR scanner
152
Citations
18
References
2013
Year
Pediatric Brain TumorsOncologic ImagingPet-mriWhole-body Diffusion-weighted ImagingDiagnosisPathologyPaediatric RadiologyPositron Emission TomographyNeuro-oncologyPet/mr Hybrid ImagingInitial Clinical ExperienceRadiation OncologyMolecular ImagingNuclear MedicineRadiologyHealth SciencesMedical ImagingPaediatric OncologyMedicineMri-guided Radiation TherapyPet/mr ScannerBiomedical ImagingPediatricsSequence ProtocolOncology
Use of PET/MR in children has not previously been reported, to the best of our knowledge. Children with systemic malignancies may benefit from the reduced radiation exposure offered by PET/MR. We report our initial experience with PET/MR hybrid imaging and our current established sequence protocol after 21 PET/MR studies in 15 children with multifocal malignant diseases. The effective dose of a PET/MR scan was only about 20% that of the equivalent PET/CT examination. Simultaneous acquisition of PET and MR data combines the advantages of the two previously separate modalities. Furthermore, the technique also enables whole-body diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) and statements to be made about the biological cellularity and nuclear/cytoplasmic ratio of tumours. Combined PET/MR saves time and resources. One disadvantage of PET/MR is that in order to have an effect, a significantly longer examination time is needed than with PET/CT. In our initial experience, PET/MR has turned out to be an unexpectedly stable and reliable hybrid imaging modality, which generates a complementary diagnostic study of great additional value.
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