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Localizing intracavitary brachytherapy applicators from cone-beam CT x-ray projections via a novel iterative forward projection matching algorithm

  • Damodar Pokhrel
  • , Martin J. Murphy
  • , Dorin A. Todor
  • , Elisabeth Weiss
  • , Jeffrey F. Williamson

Producción científica: Articlerevisión exhaustiva

2 Citas (Scopus)

Resumen

Purpose: To present a novel method for reconstructing the 3D pose (position and orientation) of radio-opaque applicators of known but arbitrary shape from a small set of 2D x-ray projections in support of intraoperative brachytherapy planning. Methods: The generalized iterative forward projection matching (gIFPM) algorithm finds the six degree-of-freedom pose of an arbitrary rigid object by minimizing the sum-of-squared-intensity differences (SSQD) between the computed and experimentally acquired autosegmented projection of the objects. Starting with an initial estimate of the object's pose, gIFPM iteratively refines the pose parameters (3D position and three Euler angles) until the SSQD converges. The object, here specialized to a Fletcher-Weeks intracavitary brachytherapy (ICB) applicator, is represented by a fine mesh of discrete points derived from complex combinatorial geometric models of the actual applicators. Three pairs of computed and measured projection images with known imaging geometry are used. Projection images of an intrauterine tandem and colpostats were acquired from an ACUITY cone-beam CT digital simulator. An image postprocessing step was performed to create blurred binary applicators only images. To quantify gIFPM accuracy, the reconstructed 3D pose of the applicator model was forward projected and overlaid with the measured images and empirically calculated the nearest-neighbor applicator positional difference for each image pair. Results: In the numerical simulations, the tandem and colpostats positions (x,y,z) and orientations (α,β,γ) were estimated with accuracies of 0.6 mm and 2°, respectively. For experimentally acquired images of actual applicators, the residual 2D registration error was less than 1.8 mm for each image pair, corresponding to about 1 mm positioning accuracy at isocenter, with a total computation time of less than 1.5 min on a 1 GHz processor. Conclusions: This work describes a novel, accurate, fast, and completely automatic method to localize radio-opaque applicators of arbitrary shape from measured 2D x-ray projections. The results demonstrate ∼1 mm accuracy while compared against the measured applicator projections. No lateral film is needed. By localizing the applicator internal structure as well as radioactive sources, the effect of intra-applicator and interapplicator attenuation can be included in the resultant dose calculations. Further validation tests using clinically acquired tandem and colpostats images will be performed for the accurate and robust applicator/sources localization in ICB patients.

Idioma originalEnglish
Páginas (desde-hasta)1070-1080
Número de páginas11
PublicaciónMedical Physics
Volumen38
N.º2
DOI
EstadoPublished - feb 2011

Financiación

This work was supported in part by grants from Varian Medical System and the National Institutes of Health (Grant No. P01 CA 116602). The authors would like to thank Virginia Gilbert of Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) for her continuous support of collecting data. The authors are grateful to Dr. Dimitrios Lazos (Beth Israel Medical Center, NY) and Andrew Sampson (VCU) for their help with combinatorial geometric modeling the authors described.

FinanciadoresNúmero del financiador
National Institutes of Health (NIH)P01 CA 116602
Varian Medical Systems

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Biophysics
    • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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