Standardized Uptake Value
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The standardized uptake value (SUV) is a
nuclear medicine Nuclear medicine (nuclear radiology, nucleology), is a medical specialty involving the application of radioactivity, radioactive substances in the diagnosis and treatment of disease. Nuclear imaging is, in a sense, ''radiology done inside out'', ...
term, used in
positron emission tomography Positron emission tomography (PET) is a functional imaging technique that uses radioactive substances known as radiotracers to visualize and measure changes in metabolic processes, and in other physiological activities including blood flow, r ...
(PET) as well as in modern calibrated single photon emission tomography (SPECT) imaging for a semiquantitative analysis. Its use is particularly common in the analysis of sup>18Fluorodeoxyglucose () images of cancer patients. It can also be used with other PET agents especially when no arterial input function is available for more detailed
pharmacokinetic Pharmacokinetics (from Ancient Greek ''pharmakon'' "drug" and ''kinetikos'' "moving, putting in motion"; see chemical kinetics), sometimes abbreviated as PK, is a branch of pharmacology dedicated to describing how the body affects a specific subs ...
modeling. Otherwise measures like the fractional uptake rate (''FUR'') or parameters from more advanced pharmacokinetic modeling may be preferable. Abnormal SUV values indicate variations in metabolic activity and thus can provide identifying areas of interest, like tumors or regions of inflammation. The ''SUV'' is the ratio of the image-derived radioactivity concentration ''cimg'' and the whole body concentration of the injected radioactivity ''cinj'', SUV = \frac .


Discussion

While this equation looks simple, there are a number of points that need to be discussed, such as (1) the origin of ''cimg'' data, (2) the origin of ''cinj'' data, (3) time, and (4) units.


Image

The ''cimg'' data may be the pixel intensities of a calibrated PET image. Calculated ''SUV'' data can then be visualized as parametric ''SUV'' image. Alternatively, groups of such pixels may be selected e.g. by manually drawing or otherwise segmenting a
region of interest A region of interest (often abbreviated ROI) is a sample within a data set identified for a particular purpose. The concept of a ROI is commonly used in many application areas. Existing as a vicinity, or within one. For example, in medical imagin ...
(ROI) on the PET image. Then e.g. the average intensity of that ROI may be used as ''cimg'' input to calculate ''SUV'' values.


Injection

The ''cinj'' value is calculated as ratio of two independent measurements: the injected radioactivity (injected dose, ID) and the body weight (BW) of the subject. The ID can be estimated e.g. as difference in the radioactivity of the syringe before and after injection, if deemed necessary with correction for physical decay between each of those measurements and the time of injection. Conventionally the time of injection is ''t''=0. This reference concentration represents the hypothetical case of an even distribution of the injected radioactivity across the whole body. Measured SUV values in particular parts of the body thus quantify the deviation from this hypothetical even radioactivity distribution: ''SUV'' > 1 indicates radioactivity accumulation in that region above the hypothetical even radioactivity distribution.


Time (Physical Decay)

The injection of radioactivity is often followed by a waiting time interval and then a time span during which the PET image data are acquired. After image reconstruction, the image ''cimg (t)'' data need to be decay corrected to the injection time point ''t''=0. The time point ''t'' may be the image acquisition start time, or in case of a long acquisition duration e.g. the midpoint of the PET image acquisition may be more appropriate. This decay correction needs to be done for each image in case of a series of images acquired after a single injection ("dynamic imaging").


Mass and Volume

The unit of ''cimg'' is MBq/mL or equivalent, based on (a) the pixel intensity calibrated with a radioactive source ("phantom") itself of known radioactivity and volume, and (b) the pixel volume or ROI volume. The unit of ''cinj'' is MBq/g or equivalent, based on the measured radioactivity and the subject's body weight. This would give ''SUV'' in units of g/mL or equivalent. However, ''SUV'' is typically presented as a unitless parameter. One way to explain this simplification is by considering that the average
mass density Density (volumetric mass density or specific mass) is the ratio of a substance's mass to its volume. The symbol most often used for density is ''ρ'' (the lower case Greek language, Greek letter rho), although the Latin letter ''D'' (or ''d'') ...
of the human body is typically close to 1 g/mL. Thus, while the body weight is usually measured and used for the SUV calculation, this is implicitly converted to the body volume in mL by division by 1 g/mL resulting in a unitless ''SUV'' parameter. Alternatively, the ''cimg'' may be considered implicitly converted into a mass concentration assuming a mass density of 1 g/mL for the ROI volume which is a good approximation for some but not all tissues in the human body.


Equation

In summary this gives the following equation to calculate ''SUV'' at time ''t'' post injection, SUV(t) = \frac with (1) the radioactivity measured from an image acquired at (or around) the time ''t'', decay corrected to ''t''=0 and expressed as volume concentration (e.g. MBq/mL), (2) the injected dose ''ID'' at ''t''=0 (e.g. in MBq), and (3) the body weight ''BW'' (near the time of image acquisition) implicitly converted into the body volume assuming an average mass density of 1 g/mL. A related measure more frequently used in preclinical PET and SPECT is the concentration in units of ''% ID/mL'' (percentage of the injected dose per mL of tissue) for biodistribution analysis. When obtained from radionuclear images, this is equal to \% ID/mL(t) = \frac \cdot 100\% . In other words, ''SUV'' can be interpreted as the ''% ID/mL'' normalized to (here, multiplied by) the body weight (or body volume) and expressed as fraction rather than percentage.


Further Considerations

Some authors replace the body weight by the lean body weight or the
body surface area In physiology and medicine, the body surface area (BSA) is the measured or calculated surface area of a human body. For many clinical purposes, BSA is a better indicator of metabolic mass than body weight because it is less affected by abnormal ad ...
. Also for c(t) from a region of interest, different measures are found in the literature, e.g., the maximum intensity value within the ROI, the mean intensity value of the ROI, or the mean intensity value of the ROI after applying an intensity threshold (thus excluding a number of pixels of the ROI).


Accuracy and Precision

The SUV can be significantly affected among other things by image noise, low image resolution and/or user biased ROI selection. For the semiquantitative analysis of uptake in tissue or tumor, several corrections have been recommended (see and references therein).


SUVR

The ratio of the ''SUV'' data from two different regions within the same PET image (i.e. from a target and a reference region) is commonly abbreviated SUVR. An example is the ratio of regional
Pittsburgh compound B Pittsburgh compound B (PiB) is a radioactive analog of thioflavin T, which can be used in positron emission tomography scans to image beta-amyloid plaques in neuronal tissue. Due to this property, Pittsburgh compound B may be used in investi ...
PET signal intensity to the average signal of a much wider region. For the SUVR, the injected activity, the body weight and the mass density that are all part of the SUV calculation, cancel: = \frac = \frac .


Outlook and Conclusions

As of 2007, the ''SUV'' concept had only begun to be tested for other radiotracers such as fluorothymidine F-18 () and conclusions on its usefulness and robustness in these cases were considered premature then. In summary, the ''SUV'' is a convenient measure for the comparison of PET images from subjects with different body masses. However, care has to be taken with respect to its pitfalls and with respect to the interpretation of results.


See also

*
Functional imaging Functional imaging (or physiological imaging) is a medical imaging technique of detecting or measuring changes in metabolism, blood flow, regional chemical composition, and absorption. As opposed to structural imaging, functional imaging center ...
*
Medical imaging Medical imaging is the technique and process of imaging the interior of a body for clinical analysis and medical intervention, as well as visual representation of the function of some organs or tissues (physiology). Medical imaging seeks to revea ...
*
Positron emission tomography Positron emission tomography (PET) is a functional imaging technique that uses radioactive substances known as radiotracers to visualize and measure changes in metabolic processes, and in other physiological activities including blood flow, r ...
*
Fluorodeoxyglucose []Fluorodeoxyglucose (International Nonproprietary Name, INN), or fluorodeoxyglucose F 18 (United States Adopted Name, USAN and United States Pharmacopeia, USP), also commonly called fluorodeoxyglucose and abbreviated []FDG, 2-[]FDG o ...
* Multi-compartment model * Patlak plot * Pharmacokinetics * Physiologically-based pharmacokinetic modelling


References

{{Reflist Medical imaging