Publication | Open Access
First Human Imaging Studies with the EXPLORER Total-Body PET Scanner*
702
Citations
5
References
2019
Year
The EXPLORER Consortium has completed the world’s first total-body PET/CT scanner. The study aims to lay groundwork for controlled trials to quantify improvements from total-body PET imaging. The 194‑cm axial field of view permits whole-body imaging in a single scan, delivering high sensitivity for short frames, low activity, or rapid acquisitions. Initial human studies on the EXPLORER scanner confirm the anticipated benefits of its high sensitivity and whole-body coverage.
Within the EXPLORER Consortium, the construction of the world’s first total-body PET/CT scanner has recently been completed. The 194-cm axial field of view of the EXPLORER PET/CT scanner is sufficient to cover, for the first time, the entire human adult body in a single acquisition in more than 99% of the population and allows total-body pharmacokinetic studies with frame durations as short as 1 s. The large increase in sensitivity arising from total-body coverage as well as increased solid angle for detection at any point within the body allows whole-body <sup>18</sup>F-FDG PET studies to be acquired with unprecedented count density, improving the signal-to-noise ratio of the resulting images. Alternatively, the sensitivity gain can be used to acquire diagnostic PET images with very small amounts of activity in the field of view (25 MBq, 0.7 mCi or less), with very short acquisition times (∼1 min or less) or at later time points after the tracer’s administration. We report here on the first human imaging studies on the EXPLORER scanner using a range of different protocols that provide initial evidence in support of these claims. These case studies provide the foundation for future carefully controlled trials to quantitatively evaluate the improvements possible through total-body PET imaging.
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