7 research outputs found

    Advanced tracking and image registration techniques for intraoperative radiation therapy

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    Mención Internacional en el título de doctorIntraoperative electron radiation therapy (IOERT) is a technique used to deliver radiation to the surgically opened tumor bed without irradiating healthy tissue. Treatment planning systems and mobile linear accelerators enable clinicians to optimize the procedure, minimize stress in the operating room (OR) and avoid transferring the patient to a dedicated radiation room. However, placement of the radiation collimator over the tumor bed requires a validation methodology to ensure correct delivery of the dose prescribed in the treatment planning system. In this dissertation, we address three well-known limitations of IOERT: applicator positioning over the tumor bed, docking of the mobile linear accelerator gantry with the applicator and validation of the dose delivery prescribed. This thesis demonstrates that these limitations can be overcome by positioning the applicator appropriately with respect to the patient’s anatomy. The main objective of the study was to assess technological and procedural alternatives for improvement of IOERT performance and resolution of problems of uncertainty. Image-to-world registration, multicamera optical trackers, multimodal imaging techniques and mobile linear accelerator docking are addressed in the context of IOERT. IOERT is carried out by a multidisciplinary team in a highly complex environment that has special tracking needs owing to the characteristics of its working volume (i.e., large and prone to occlusions), in addition to the requisites of accuracy. The first part of this dissertation presents the validation of a commercial multicamera optical tracker in terms of accuracy, sensitivity to miscalibration, camera occlusions and detection of tools using a feasible surgical setup. It also proposes an automatic miscalibration detection protocol that satisfies the IOERT requirements of automaticity and speed. We show that the multicamera tracker is suitable for IOERT navigation and demonstrate the feasibility of the miscalibration detection protocol in clinical setups. Image-to-world registration is one of the main issues during image-guided applications where the field of interest and/or the number of possible anatomical localizations is large, such as IOERT. In the second part of this dissertation, a registration algorithm for image-guided surgery based on lineshaped fiducials (line-based registration) is proposed and validated. Line-based registration decreases acquisition time during surgery and enables better registration accuracy than other published algorithms. In the third part of this dissertation, we integrate a commercial low-cost ultrasound transducer and a cone beam CT C-arm with an optical tracker for image-guided interventions to enable surgical navigation and explore image based registration techniques for both modalities. In the fourth part of the dissertation, a navigation system based on optical tracking for the docking of the mobile linear accelerator to the radiation applicator is assessed. This system improves safety and reduces procedure time. The system tracks the prescribed collimator location to solve the movements that the linear accelerator should perform to reach the docking position and warns the user about potentially unachievable arrangements before the actual procedure. A software application was implemented to use this system in the OR, where it was also evaluated to assess the improvement in docking speed. Finally, in the last part of the dissertation, we present and assess the installation setup for a navigation system in a dedicated IOERT OR, determine the steps necessary for the IOERT process, identify workflow limitations and evaluate the feasibility of the integration of the system in a real OR. The navigation system safeguards the sterile conditions of the OR, clears the space available for surgeons and is suitable for any similar dedicated IOERT OR.La Radioterapia Intraoperatoria por electrones (RIO) consiste en la aplicación de radiación de alta energía directamente sobre el lecho tumoral, accesible durante la cirugía, evitando radiar los tejidos sanos. Hoy en día, avances como los sistemas de planificación (TPS) y la aparición de aceleradores lineales móviles permiten optimizar el procedimiento, minimizar el estrés clínico en el entorno quirúrgico y evitar el desplazamiento del paciente durante la cirugía a otra sala para ser radiado. La aplicación de la radiación se realiza mediante un colimador del haz de radiación (aplicador) que se coloca sobre el lecho tumoral de forma manual por el oncólogo radioterápico. Sin embargo, para asegurar una correcta deposición de la dosis prescrita y planificada en el TPS, es necesaria una adecuada validación de la colocación del colimador. En esta Tesis se abordan tres limitaciones conocidas del procedimiento RIO: el correcto posicionamiento del aplicador sobre el lecho tumoral, acoplamiento del acelerador lineal con el aplicador y validación de la dosis de radiación prescrita. Esta Tesis demuestra que estas limitaciones pueden ser abordadas mediante el posicionamiento del aplicador de radiación en relación con la anatomía del paciente. El objetivo principal de este trabajo es la evaluación de alternativas tecnológicas y procedimentales para la mejora de la práctica de la RIO y resolver los problemas de incertidumbre descritos anteriormente. Concretamente se revisan en el contexto de la radioterapia intraoperatoria los siguientes temas: el registro de la imagen y el paciente, sistemas de posicionamiento multicámara, técnicas de imagen multimodal y el acoplamiento del acelerador lineal móvil. El entorno complejo y multidisciplinar de la RIO precisa de necesidades especiales para el empleo de sistemas de posicionamiento como una alta precisión y un volumen de trabajo grande y propenso a las oclusiones de los sensores de posición. La primera parte de esta Tesis presenta una exhaustiva evaluación de un sistema de posicionamiento óptico multicámara comercial. Estudiamos la precisión del sistema, su sensibilidad a errores cometidos en la calibración, robustez frente a posibles oclusiones de las cámaras y precisión en el seguimiento de herramientas en un entorno quirúrgico real. Además, proponemos un protocolo para la detección automática de errores por calibración que satisface los requisitos de automaticidad y velocidad para la RIO demostrando la viabilidad del empleo de este sistema para la navegación en RIO. Uno de los problemas principales de la cirugía guiada por imagen es el correcto registro de la imagen médica y la anatomía del paciente en el quirófano. En el caso de la RIO, donde el número de posibles localizaciones anatómicas es bastante amplio, así como el campo de trabajo es grande se hace necesario abordar este problema para una correcta navegación. Por ello, en la segunda parte de esta Tesis, proponemos y validamos un nuevo algoritmo de registro (LBR) para la cirugía guiada por imagen basado en marcadores lineales. El método propuesto reduce el tiempo de la adquisición de la posición de los marcadores durante la cirugía y supera en precisión a otros algoritmos de registro establecidos y estudiados en la literatura. En la tercera parte de esta tesis, integramos un transductor de ultrasonido comercial de bajo coste, un arco en C de rayos X con haz cónico y un sistema de posicionamiento óptico para intervenciones guiadas por imagen que permite la navegación quirúrgica y exploramos técnicas de registro de imagen para ambas modalidades. En la cuarta parte de esta tesis se evalúa un navegador basado en el sistema de posicionamiento óptico para el acoplamiento del acelerador lineal móvil con aplicador de radiación, mejorando la seguridad y reduciendo el tiempo del propio acoplamiento. El sistema es capaz de localizar el colimador en el espacio y proporcionar los movimientos que el acelerador lineal debe realizar para alcanzar la posición de acoplamiento. El sistema propuesto es capaz de advertir al usuario de aquellos casos donde la posición de acoplamiento sea inalcanzable. El sistema propuesto de ayuda para el acoplamiento se integró en una aplicación software que fue evaluada para su uso final en quirófano demostrando su viabilidad y la reducción de tiempo de acoplamiento mediante su uso. Por último, presentamos y evaluamos la instalación de un sistema de navegación en un quirófano RIO dedicado, determinamos las necesidades desde el punto de vista procedimental, identificamos las limitaciones en el flujo de trabajo y evaluamos la viabilidad de la integración del sistema en un entorno quirúrgico real. El sistema propuesto demuestra ser apto para el entorno RIO manteniendo las condiciones de esterilidad y dejando despejado el campo quirúrgico además de ser adaptable a cualquier quirófano similar.Programa Oficial de Doctorado en Multimedia y ComunicacionesPresidente: Raúl San José Estépar.- Secretario: María Arrate Muñoz Barrutia.- Vocal: Carlos Ferrer Albiac

    A Novel Prior- and Motion-Based Compressed Sensing Method for Small-Animal Respiratory Gated CT

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    Low-dose protocols for respiratory gating in cardiothoracic small-animal imaging lead to streak artifacts in the images reconstructed with a Feldkamp-Davis-Kress (FDK) method. We propose a novel prior-and motion-based reconstruction (PRIMOR) method, which improves prior-based reconstruction (PBR) by adding a penalty function that includes a model of motion. The prior image is generated as the average of all the respiratory gates, reconstructed with FDK. Motion between respiratory gates is estimated using a nonrigid registration method based on hierarchical B-splines. We compare PRIMOR with an equivalent PBR method without motion estimation using as reference the reconstruction of high dose data. From these data acquired with a micro-CT scanner, different scenarios were simulated by changing photon flux and number of projections. Methods were evaluated in terms of contrast-to-noise-ratio (CNR), mean square error (MSE), streak artefact indicator (SAI), solution error norm (SEN), and correction of respiratory motion. Also, to evaluate the effect of each method on lung studies quantification, we have computed the Jaccard similarity index of the mask obtained from segmenting each image as compared to those obtained from the high dose reconstruction. Both iterative methods greatly improved FDK reconstruction in all cases. PBR was prone to streak artifacts and presented blurring effects in bone and lung tissues when using both a low number of projections and low dose. Adopting PBR as a reference, PRIMOR increased CNR up to 33% and decreased MSE, SAI and SEN up to 20%, 4% and 13%, respectively. PRIMOR also presented better compensation for respiratory motion and higher Jaccard similarity index. In conclusion, the new method proposed for low-dose respiratory gating in small-animal scanners shows an improvement in image quality and allows a reduction of dose or a reduction of the number of projections between two and three times with respect to previous PBR approaches.This work was funded by the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (www.mineco.gob.es/) with projects IDI-20130301, TEC2013-47270-R, IPT-2012-0401-300000, RTC-2014-3028-1, and RD12/0042/0057. Also, the research leading to these results has received funding from the Innovative Medicines Initiative (www.imi.europa.eu) Joint Undertaking under grant agreement n°115337, resources of which are composed of financial contribution from the European Union's Seventh Framework Programme (FP7/2007-2013) and EFPIA companies' in kind contribution. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.Publicad

    ConoSurf: Open-source 3D scanning system based on a conoscopic holography device for acquiring surgical surfaces

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    Background. A difficulty in computer-assisted interventions is acquiring the patient's anatomy intraoperatively. Standard modalities have several limitations: low image quality (ultrasound), radiation exposure (computed tomography) or high costs (magnetic resonance imaging). An alternative approach uses a tracked pointer; however, the pointer causes tissue deformation and requires sterilizing. Recent proposals, utilizing a tracked conoscopic holography device, have shown promising results without the previously mentioned drawbacks. Methods. We have developed an open-source software system that enables real-time surface scanning using a conoscopic holography device and a wide variety of tracking systems, integrated into pre-existing and well-supported software solutions. Results. The mean target registration error of point measurements was 1.46 mm. For a quick guidance scan, surface reconstruction improved the surface registration error compared with point-set registration. Conclusions. We have presented a system enabling real-time surface scanning using a tracked conoscopic holography device. Results show that it can be useful for acquiring the patient's anatomy during surgery.Funding information: (Comunidad de Madrid), Grant/Award Number: TOPUS‐CM S2013/MIT‐3024; (Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad, ISCIII), Grant/Award Number: PI15/02121. DTS14/00192. TEC2013–48251‐C2–1‐R, FEDER fund

    Multicamera Optical Tracker Assessment for Computer Aided Surgery Applications

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    Image-guided interventions enable the surgeon to display the position of instruments and devices with respect to the patient's imaging studies during surgery by means of a tracker device. Optical trackers are commonly chosen for many surgical applications when high accuracy and robustness are required. OptiTrack is a multicamera optical tracker whose number of sensors and their spatial configuration can be adapted to the application requirements, making it suitable for surgical settings. Nonetheless, no extensive studies of its accuracy are available. The purpose of this paper was to evaluate an eight-camera optical tracker in terms of accuracy, miscalibration sensitivity, camera occlusions, and tool detection in a feasible clinical setup. We studied the tracking accuracy of the system using a robotic arm (~μm precision) as the gold standard, a single reflective marker, and various tracked objects while the system was installed in an operating room. Miscalibration sensitivity was 0.16°. Mean target error was 0.24 mm for a single marker, decreasing to 0.05 mm for tracked tools. Single-marker error increased up to 1.65 mm when five cameras where occluded although 75% of the working volume showed an error lower than 0.23 mm. The accuracy was sufficient for navigating the collimator in intraoperative electron radiation therapy, improving redundancy and allowing large-working volumes. The tracker assessment we present and the validated miscalibration protocol are important contributions to image-guided surgery, where the choice of the tracker is critical and the knowledge of the accuracy in situations of camera occlusion is mandatory during surgical navigation

    Estudio de la viabilidad de la integración de un Sistema de Posicionamiento Óptico en el entorno de la radioterapia intraoperatoria

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    Actas de: XXIX Congreso Anual de la Sociedad Espñaola de Ingeniería Biomédica (CASEIB 2011). Cáceres, 16-18 Noviembre 2011.La radioterapia intraoperatoria (RIO) es una técnica que combina cirugía y radioterapia, que se aplica en pacientes con tumores para los que se ha indicado su resección y con alto riesgo recidivante. El oncólogo radioterapeuta planifica esta intervención sobre una imagen TAC del paciente. Sin embargo, los datos del escenario real encontrado en la sala de tratamiento (posición y orientación del aplicador respecto del paciente y energía del haz) se deben recoger de forma manual para actualizar la planificación. Esta información es muy valiosa para la documentación y posterior seguimiento del procedimiento realizado. En este trabajo se evalúa la viabilidad de la integración de un sistema de posicionamiento óptico en el entorno RIO, y su precisión para localizar el aplicador sobre la imagen de planificación.Este trabajo ha sido financiado por el Minsiterio de Ciencia e Innovación (PI09/90568 IPT-3000000-2010-3, TEC2010-21619-C04-01), la Comunidad de Madrid (ARTEMIS S2009/DPI-1802) y fondos FEDER.Publicad

    Technical Note: Mobile accelerator guidance using an optical tracker during docking in IOERT procedures

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    Purpose: Intraoperative electron radiation therapy (IOERT) involves the delivery of a high radiation dose during tumor resection in a shorter time than other radiation techniques, thus improving local control of tumors. However, a linear accelerator device is needed to produce the beam safely. Mobile linear accelerators have been designed as dedicated units that can be moved into the operating room and deliver radiation in situ. Correct and safe dose delivery is a key concern when using mobile accelerators. The applicator is commonly fixed to the patient's bed to ensure that the dose is delivered to the prescribed location, and the mobile accelerator is moved to dock the applicator to the radiation beam output (gantry). In a typical clinical set-up, this task is time-consuming because of safety requirements and the limited degree of freedom of the gantry. The objective of this study was to present a navigation solution based on optical tracking for guidance of docking to improve safety and reduce procedure time. Method: We used an optical tracker attached to the mobile linear accelerator to track the prescribed localization of the radiation collimator inside the operating room. Using this information, the integrated navigation system developed computes the movements that the mobile linear accelerator needs to perform to align the applicator and the radiation gantry and warns the physician if docking is unrealizable according to the available degrees of freedom of the mobile linear accelerator. Furthermore, we coded a software application that connects all the necessary functioning elements and provides a user interface for the system calibration and the docking guidance. Result: The system could safeguard against the spatial limitations of the operating room, calculate the optimal arrangement of the accelerator and reduce the docking time in computer simulations and experimental setups. Conclusions: The system could be used to guide docking with any commercial linear accelerator. We believe that the docking navigator we present is a major contribution to IOERT, where docking is critical when attempting to reduce surgical time, ensure patient safety and guarantee that the treatment administered follows the radiation oncologist's prescription

    Integration of free-hand 3D ultrasound and mobile C-arm cone-beam CT: Feasibility and characterization for real-time guidance of needle insertione

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    This work presents development of an integrated ultrasound (US)-cone-beam CT (CBCT) system for image-guided needle interventions, combining a low-cost ultrasound system (Interson VC 7.5 MHz, Pleasanton, CA) with a mobile C-arm for fluoroscopy and CBCT via use of a surgical tracker. Imaging performance of the ultrasound system was characterized in terms of depth-dependent contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR) and spatial resolution. US-CBCT system was evaluated in phantom studies simulating three needle-based procedures: drug delivery, tumor ablation, and lumbar puncture. Low-cost ultrasound provided flexibility but exhibited modest CNR and spatial resolution that is likely limited to fairly superficial applications within a 10 cm depth of view. Needle tip localization demonstrated target registration error 2.1-3.0 mm using fiducial-based registration.This work was funded by NIH grant R01-EB-017226, research partnership with Siemens XP (Erlangen, Germany), and grants TEC2013-48251-C2-1-R (Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad), DTS14/00192 (ISCIII), EU FP7 IRSES TAHITI (#269300), and FEDER funds.Publicad
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