Presentation + Paper
22 February 2021 Cone-beam CT for neurosurgical guidance: high-fidelity artifacts correction for soft-tissue contrast resolution
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Purpose: Intraoperative cone-beam CT (CBCT) plays an important role in neurosurgical guidance but is conventionally limited to high-contrast bone visualization. This work reports a high-fidelity artifacts correction pipeline to advance image quality beyond conventional limits and achieve soft-tissue contrast resolution even in the presence of multiple metal objects – specifically, a stereotactic head frame. Methods: A new metal artifact reduction (MAR) method was developed based on a convolutional neural network (CNN) that simultaneously estimates metal-induced bias and metal path length in the projection domain. To improve generalizability of the network, a physics-based method was developed to generate highly accurate simulated, metalcontaminated projection training data. The MAR method was integrated with previously proposed artifacts correction methods (lag, glare, scatter, and beam-hardening) to form a high-fidelity artifacts correction pipeline. The proposed methods were tested using an intraoperative CBCT system (O-arm, Medtronic) emulating a realistic setup in stereotactic neurosurgery, including nominal (20 cm) and extended (40 cm) field of view (FOV) protocols. Results: The physics-based data generation method provided accurate simulation of metal in projection data, including scatter, polyenergetic, quantum noise, and electronic noise effects. The artifacts correction pipeline was able to accommodate both 20 cm and 40 cm FOV protocols and demonstrated ~80% improvement in image uniformity and ~20% increase in contrast-to-noise ratio (CNR). Fully corrected images in the smaller FOV mode exhibited ~32% increase in CNR compared to the 40 cm FOV mode, showing the method’s ability to handle truncated metal objects outside the FOV. Conclusion: The image quality of intraoperative CBCT was greatly improved with the proposed artifacts correction pipeline, with clear improvement in soft-tissue contrast resolution (e.g., cerebral ventricles) even in the presence of a complex metal stereotactic frame. Such capability gives clearer visualization of structures of interest for intracranial neurosurgery, and it provides an important basis for future work aiming to deformably register preoperative MRI to intraoperative CBCT. Ongoing work includes clinical studies now underway.
Conference Presentation
© (2021) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
P. Wu, A. Sisniega, A. Uneri, R. Han, M. Ketcha, C. K. Jones, P. Vagdargi, X. Zhang, M. Luciano, W. S. Anderson, and J. H. Siewerdsen "Cone-beam CT for neurosurgical guidance: high-fidelity artifacts correction for soft-tissue contrast resolution", Proc. SPIE 11595, Medical Imaging 2021: Physics of Medical Imaging, 115950X (22 February 2021); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2581686
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KEYWORDS
Metals

Image quality

Image resolution

Quantum electronics

Visualization

Bone

Convolutional neural networks

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