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Virtual myocardial blood flow and flow reserve from static PET imaging using artificial intelligence

February 5, 2026medrxiv logopreprint

Authors

Urs, M.,Kwiecinski, J.,Lemley, M.,Chareonthaitawee, P.,Ramirez, G.,Shanbhag, A.,Killekar, A.,DeKemp, R.,Acampa, W.,Le, V. T.,Mason, S.,Knight, S.,Packard, R. R. S.,Al-Mallah, M.,Berman, D. S.,Dey, D.,Miller, R. J. H.,Di Carli, M.,Slomka, P. J.

Affiliations (1)

  • Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

Abstract

BackgroundQuantitative myocardial blood flow (MBF) and myocardial flow reserve (MFR) provide incremental diagnostic and prognostic value in cardiac PET, but their widespread use is limited by the technical demands of dynamic imaging protocols. We evaluated the feasibility of using artificial intelligence (AI) to predict MBF and MFR from static and gated PET images, without the need for dynamic acquisition. MethodsA machine learning (XGBoost) model was trained on 82Rb PET multi-center dataset using static perfusion imaging, injected dose, hemodynamic measures, clinical data and CT-derived features (including body composition) from the hybrid CT attenuation scan. Model performance was evaluated externally in an independent cohort. ResultsIn total, 10,566 (derivation-cohort) and 7,842 (external-cohort) patients were included in this multi-center study. On the external-cohort, AI approach achieved an Area under the curve (AUC) of 0.92 (0.92-0.93) for abnormal stress MBF and 0.91 (0.90-0.92) for abnormal MFR; Intra-class correlation (ICC) 0.80 (0.78-0.82) and 0.78 (0.76-0.79), respectively. AI MFR closely mirrored the prognostic performance of measured MFR, showing nearly identical Kaplan-Meier risk stratification (both p<0.0001) and maintaining strong, and independently significant associations with all-cause mortality (HR 3.4 [2.8-4.2] vs. 4.6 [3.6-5.8]; both p<0.001), and demonstrated similar added value to perfusion for mortality prediction. ConclusionAI-predicted virtual stress MBF and MFR assessment using static and gated PET data is feasible and generalizable across cohorts. By removing the dependency on dynamic acquisitions, this approach has the potential to broaden the clinical adoption of flow quantification. O_FIG O_LINKSMALLFIG WIDTH=200 HEIGHT=97 SRC="FIGDIR/small/26345376v1_ufig1.gif" ALT="Figure 1"> View larger version (27K): [email protected]@25114aorg.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@1924ee5org.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@79c21f_HPS_FORMAT_FIGEXP M_FIG STRUCTURED GRAPHICAL ABSTRACT PET: Positron Emission Tomography, CT: Computed Tomography, MFR: Myocardial Flow Reserve C_FIG Key Question: Can machine learning models trained on dynamic PET datasets accurately predict regional stress myocardial blood flow (MBF) and myocardial flow reserve (MFR) from static image features, physiological parameters, and CT-based anatomical measures? Key Finding: Artificial intelligence can accurately estimate MBF and MFR from non-dynamic PET data, with strong agreement to reference standards. Take-home Message: By eliminating reliance on dynamic PET acquisitions, machine-learning has the potential to broaden clinical adoption of quantitative flow assessment.

Topics

cardiovascular medicine

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