Coupling computed tomography with positron emission tomography (PET/CT) supplements tracer uptake with anatomical information for localization and improves PET quantification by using CT images for attenuation correction. Iodinated contrast agents in CT scans are used to enhance vascularity, organs, and abnormalities and for characterize lesions. However, current attenuation correction methodologies generate overestimates in standardized uptake values (SUV) in the presence of materials with high atomic numbers such as iodinated contrast agents. Utilizing electron density (ED) from dual energy CT (DECT) may result in less biased attenuation correction as ED is proportional to attenuation at PET emission energy of 511 keV. To evaluate different methods of attenuation correction, five phantom configurations with varying iodine concentrations and constant concentrations of Fluorine-18 were scanned using PET/CT and DECT at similar scanning parameters. Phantom configurations were scanned at CTDIvol 2, 4, 6, and 8 mGy with DECT to evaluate the effect of dose on ED and SUV. For attenuation correction, ED was transformed into attenuation at 511 keV through reported material compositions and ED. SUV demonstrated less biased behavior in the presence of iodinated contrast media with ED-based correction (-1.3% to 1.4%, p=0.271) compared to nominal correction (1.5% to 8.6%, p=0.000). No interaction effect between dose and phantom configuration or effect of dose on SUV was present, which was also reflected in ED stability in different tissue mimics. Use of ED-based attenuation correction from DECT allowed for less biased SUV when increasing concentrations of iodinated contrast agents, indicating quantitative advantages of DECT coupled with PET.
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