30 research outputs found

    Image fusion techniques in permanent seed implantation

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    Deformable registration of X-ray and MRI for post-implant dosimetry in low-dose-rate prostate brachytherapy

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    Purpose Dosimetric assessment following permanent prostate brachytherapy (PPB) commonly involves seed localization using CT and prostate delineation using coregistered MRI. However, pelvic CT leads to additional imaging dose and requires significant resources to acquire and process both CT and MRI. In this study, we propose an automatic postimplant dosimetry approach that retains MRI for soft‐tissue contouring, but eliminates the need for CT and reduces imaging dose while overcoming the inconsistent appearance of seeds on MRI with three projection x rays acquired using a mobile C‐arm. Methods Implanted seeds are reconstructed using x rays by solving a combinatorial optimization problem and deformably registered to MRI. Candidate seeds are located in MR images using local hypointensity identification. X ray‐based seeds are registered to these candidate seeds in three steps: (a) rigid registration using a stochastic evolutionary optimizer, (b) affine registration using an iterative closest point optimizer, and (c) deformable registration using a local feature point search and nonrigid coherent point drift. The algorithm was evaluated using 20 PPB patients with x rays acquired immediately postimplant and T2‐weighted MR images acquired the next day at 1.5 T with mean 0.8 × 0.8 × 3.0 mmurn:x-wiley:00942405:media:mp13667:mp13667-math-0001 voxel dimensions. Target registration error (TRE) was computed based on the distance from algorithm results to manually identified seed locations using coregistered CT acquired the same day as the MRI. Dosimetric accuracy was determined by comparing prostate D90 determined using the algorithm and the ground truth CT‐based seed locations. Results The mean ± standard deviation TREs across 20 patients including 1774 seeds were 2.23 ± 0.52 mm (rigid), 1.99 ± 0.49 mm (rigid + affine), and 1.76 ± 0.43 mm (rigid + affine + deformable). The corresponding mean ± standard deviation D90 errors were 5.8 ± 4.8%, 3.4 ± 3.4%, and 2.3 ± 1.9%, respectively. The mean computation time of the registration algorithm was 6.1 s. Conclusion The registration algorithm accuracy and computation time are sufficient for clinical PPB postimplant dosimetry

    SEED LOCALIZATION IN IMAGE-GUIDED PROSTATE BRACHYTHERAPY INTRAOPERATIVE DOSIMETRY SYSTEMS

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    Prostate cancer is the most common cancer among men in the United States. Many treatments are available, but prostate brachytherapy is acknowledged as a standard treatment for patients with localized cancer. Prostate brachytherapy is a minimally invasive surgery involving the permanent implantation of approximately 100 grain-sized radioactive seeds into the prostate. While effective, contemporary practice of brachytherapy is suboptimal because it spreads the stages of planning, implant, and dosimetry over several weeks. Although brachytherapy is now moving towards intraoperative treatment planning (ITP) which integrates all three stages into a single day in the operating room,the American Brachytherapy Society states, “the major current limitation of ITP is the inability to localize the seeds in relation to the prostate.” While the procedure is traditionally guided by transrectal ultrasound (TRUS), poor image quality prevents TRUS from accurately localizing seeds to compute dosimetry intraoperatively. Alternative methods exist, but are generally impractical to implement in clinics worldwide. The subject of this dissertation is the development of two intraoperative dosimetry systems to practically solve the problem of seed localization in ITP. The first system fuses TRUS with X-ray fluoroscopy using the ubiquitous non-isocentric mobile C-arm.The primary contributions of this dissertation include an automatic fiducial and seed segmentation algorithm for fluoroscopic images, as well as a next generation intraoperative dosimetry system based on a fiducial with seed-like markers. Results from over 30 patients prove that both contributions are significant for localizing seeds with high accuracy and demonstrate the capability of detecting cold spots. The second intraoperative dosimetry system is based on photoacoustic imaging, and uses the already implemented TRUS probe to detect ultrasonic waves converted from electromagnetic waves generated by a laser. The primary contributions of this dissertation therefore also include a prototype benchtop photoacoustic system and an improved clinical version usable in the operating room. Results from gelatin phantoms, an ex vivo dog prostate, and an in vivo dog study reveal that multiple seeds are clearly visible with high contrast using photoacoustic imaging at clinically safe laser energies.Together, both systems significantly progress the latest technologies to provide optimal care to patients through ITP

    Automatic C-arm pose estimation via 2D/3D hybrid registration of a radiographic fiducial

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    ABSTRACT Motivation: In prostate brachytherapy, real-time dosimetry would be ideal to allow for rapid evaluation of the implant quality intra-operatively. However, such a mechanism requires an imaging system that is both real-time and which provides, via multiple C-arm fluoroscopy images, clear information describing the three-dimensional position of the seeds deposited within the prostate. Thus, accurate tracking of the C-arm poses proves to be of critical importance to the process. Methodology: We compute the pose of the C-arm relative to a stationary radiographic fiducial of known geometry by employing a hybrid registration framework. Firstly, by means of an ellipse segmentation algorithm and a 2D/3D feature based registration, we exploit known FTRAC geometry to recover an initial estimate of the C-arm pose. Using this estimate, we then initialize the intensity-based registration which serves to recover a refined and accurate estimation of the C-arm pose. Results: Ground-truth pose was established for each C-arm image through a published and clinically tested segmentation-based method. Using 169 clinical C-arm images and a ±10° and ±10 mm random perturbation of the ground-truth pose, the average rotation and translation errors were 0.68° (std = 0.06°) and 0.64 mm (std = 0.24 mm). Conclusion: Fully automated C-arm pose estimation using a 2D/3D hybrid registration scheme was found to be clinically robust based on human patient data

    A Study of Image-based C-arm Tracking Using Minimal Fiducials

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    Image-based tracking of the c-arm continues to be a critical and challenging problem for many clinical applications due to its widespread use in many computer-assisted procedures that rely upon its accuracy for further planning, registration, and reconstruction tasks. In this thesis, a variety of approaches are presented to improve current c-arm tracking methods and devices for intra-operative procedures. The first approach presents a novel two-dimensional fiducial comprising a set of coplanar conics and an improved single-image pose estimation algorithm that addresses segmentation errors using a mathematical equilibration approach. Simulation results show an improvement in the mean rotation and translation errors by factors of 4 and 1.75, respectively, as a result of using the proposed algorithm. Experiments using real data obtained by imaging a simple precisely machined model consisting of three coplanar ellipses retrieve pose estimates that are in good agreement with those obtained by a ground truth optical tracker. This two-dimensional fiducial can be easily placed under the patient allowing a wide field of view for the motion of the c-arm. The second approach employs learning-based techniques to two-view geometrical theories. A demonstrative algorithm is used to simultaneously tackle matching and segmentation issues of features segmented from pairs of acquired images. The corrected features can then be used to retrieve the epipolar geometry which can ultimately provide pose parameters using a one-dimensional fiducial. The problem of match refinement for epipolar geometry estimation is formulated in a reinforcement-learning framework. Experiments demonstrate the ability to both reject false matches and fix small localization errors in the segmentation of true noisy matches in a minimal number of steps. The third approach presents a feasibility study for an approach that entirely eliminates the use of tracking fiducials. It relies only on preoperative data to initialize a point-based model that is subsequently used to iteratively estimate the pose and the structure of the point-like intraoperative implant using three to six images simultaneously. This method is tested in the framework of prostate brachytherapy in which preoperative data including planned 3-D locations for a large number of point-like implants called seeds is usually available. Simultaneous pose estimation for the c-arm for each image and localization of the seeds is studied in a simulation environment. Results indicate mean reconstruction errors that are less than 1.2 mm for noisy plans of 84 seeds or fewer. These are attained when the 3D mean error introduced to the plan as a result of adding Gaussian noise is less than 3.2 mm

    Enabling technologies for MRI guided interventional procedures

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    This dissertation addresses topics related to developing interventional assistant devices for Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI). MRI can provide high-quality 3D visualization of target anatomy and surrounding tissue, but the benefits can not be readily harnessed for interventional procedures due to difficulties associated with the use of high-field (1.5T or greater) MRI. Discussed are potential solutions to the inability to use conventional mecha- tronics and the confined physical space in the scanner bore. This work describes the development of two apparently dissimilar systems that repre- sent different approaches to the same surgical problem - coupling information and action to perform percutaneous (through the skin) needle placement with MR imaging. The first system addressed takes MR images and projects them along with a surgical plan directly on the interventional site, thus providing in-situ imaging. With anatomical images and a corresponding plan visible in the appropriate pose, the clinician can use this information to perform the surgical action. My primary research effort has focused on a robotic assistant system that overcomes the difficulties inherent to MR-guided procedures, and promises safe and reliable intra-prostatic needle placement inside closed high-field MRI scanners. The robot is a servo pneumatically operated automatic needle guide, and effectively guides needles under real- time MR imaging. This thesis describes development of the robotic system including requirements, workspace analysis, mechanism design and optimization, and evaluation of MR compatibility. Further, a generally applicable MR-compatible robot controller is de- veloped, the pneumatic control system is implemented and evaluated, and the system is deployed in pre-clinical trials. The dissertation concludes with future work and lessons learned from this endeavor

    Endorectal Digital Prostate Tomosynthesis

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    Several areas of prostate cancer (PCa) management, such as imaging permanent brachytherapy implants or small, aggressive lesions, benefit from high image resolution. Current PCa imaging methods can have inadequate resolution for imaging these areas. Endorectal digital prostate tomosynthesis (endoDPT), an imaging method that combines an external x-ray source and an endorectal x-ray sensor, can produce three-dimensional images of the prostate region that have high image resolution compared to typical methods. This high resolution may improve PCa management and increase positive outcomes in affected men. This dissertation presents the initial development of endoDPT, including system design, image quality assessment, and examples of possible applications to prostate imaging. Experiments using computational phantoms, physical phantoms, and canine prostate specimens were conducted. Initial system design was performed computationally and three methods of endoDPT image reconstruction were developed: shift and add (SAA), backprojection (BP), and filtered BP (FBP). A physical system was developed using an XDR intraoral x-ray sensor and a GE radiography unit. The resolution and radiation dose of endoDPT were measured and compared to a GE CT scanner. Canine prostate specimens that approximated clinical cases of PCa management were imaged and compared using endoDPT, the above CT scanner, and a GE MRI scanner. This study found that the resolution of endoDPT was significantly higher than CT. The radiation dose of endoDPT was significantly lower than CT in the regions of the phantom that were not in the endoDPT field of view (FoV). Inside the endoDPT FoV, the radiation dose ranged from significantly less than to significantly greater than CT. The endoDPT images of the canine prostate specimens demonstrated qualitative improvements in resolution compared to CT and MRI, but endoDPT had difficulty in visualizing larger structures, such as the prostate border. Overall, this study has demonstrated endoDPT has high image resolution compared to typical methods of PCa imaging. Future work will be focused on development of a prototype system that improves scanning efficiency that can be used to optimize endoDPT and perform pre-clinical studies

    New Mechatronic Systems for the Diagnosis and Treatment of Cancer

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    Both two dimensional (2D) and three dimensional (3D) imaging modalities are useful tools for viewing the internal anatomy. Three dimensional imaging techniques are required for accurate targeting of needles. This improves the efficiency and control over the intervention as the high temporal resolution of medical images can be used to validate the location of needle and target in real time. Relying on imaging alone, however, means the intervention is still operator dependent because of the difficulty of controlling the location of the needle within the image. The objective of this thesis is to improve the accuracy and repeatability of needle-based interventions over conventional techniques: both manual and automated techniques. This includes increasing the accuracy and repeatability of these procedures in order to minimize the invasiveness of the procedure. In this thesis, I propose that by combining the remote center of motion concept using spherical linkage components into a passive or semi-automated device, the physician will have a useful tracking and guidance system at their disposal in a package, which is less threatening than a robot to both the patient and physician. This design concept offers both the manipulative transparency of a freehand system, and tremor reduction through scaling currently offered in automated systems. In addressing each objective of this thesis, a number of novel mechanical designs incorporating an remote center of motion architecture with varying degrees of freedom have been presented. Each of these designs can be deployed in a variety of imaging modalities and clinical applications, ranging from preclinical to human interventions, with an accuracy of control in the millimeter to sub-millimeter range
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