PET/SPECT Isotope Activity Planner
Calculate the required calibration activity for PET and SPECT radiopharmaceuticals, or find the remaining activity at any point after calibration.
๐ฅ What is the PET/SPECT Isotope Activity Planner?
The PET/SPECT Isotope Activity Planner is a clinical nuclear medicine tool that calculates the activity of a radiopharmaceutical dose at any point in its lifecycle, from the moment it is calibrated in the hot lab to the moment it is injected into a patient. Because every radioactive isotope decays continuously, the activity present at calibration time is always greater than the activity delivered at injection time. Accurate decay correction is essential for both patient safety and diagnostic quality.
The planner addresses two complementary problems faced daily in nuclear medicine departments. The first problem is determining how much activity to prepare. If you need to inject 370 MBq of F-18 FDG into a patient 60 minutes after the dose is calibrated, you cannot simply order 370 MBq from the cyclotron facility. You must account for decay during transit and preparation, which means you actually need roughly 541 MBq at calibration time. The second problem is determining how much activity remains in a batch at any given moment, which governs whether a batch is still usable and how many patients it can serve.
The calculator covers 11 commonly used PET and SPECT isotopes: F-18, Tc-99m, Ga-68, I-123, Rb-82, Cu-64, Zr-89, Lu-177, Y-90, Tl-201, and In-111. Each isotope has a substantially different half-life, ranging from 76 seconds for Rb-82 to 6.7 days for Lu-177, which creates very different logistical challenges. A custom half-life entry supports any other isotope not in the preloaded list.
The Decay Calculator mode goes beyond a simple current-activity estimate by showing the times at which 50%, 25%, 10%, and 5% of the original calibration activity remain. These landmarks help radiopharmacists plan multi-patient sessions, decide when to discard a batch, and schedule quality control measurements. Together, the two modes replace the manual lookup tables and spreadsheet calculations that nuclear medicine technologists previously relied on for daily dose planning.