Title :
Automatic bone removal for 3D liver tace planning with C-arm CT
Author :
Hansis, E. ; Radaelli, A. ; Noordhoek, N. ; Lorenz, Casimir ; Grass, M.
Author_Institution :
Philips Res., Hamburg, Germany
Abstract :
Transarterial chemoembolization (TACE) involves a targeted catheter-based injection of a chemotherapeutic and an embolic agent into the feeding vessels of a liver tumor. For this task, contrast-enhanced C-arm computed tomography (C-arm CT) is gaining popularity, as it offers three-dimensional (3D) imaging of vessels and tumors during the intervention. The identification and segmentation of tumor feeding vessels is preferably performed using volume visualization methods. However, the presence of surrounding bone structures impedes un-obstructed vessel visualization and may impact vessel segmentation. We present an approach for fully automated bone removal to facilitate 3D TACE planning. A model of the `visceral cavity´, containing the internal organs, is adapted to the target image; bones outside the adapted model are removed. The method is evaluated on 30 clinical cases. In a quantitative evaluation against manual segmentations, the mean mesh-to-mesh distance is 2.7 mm, with best performance in the spine area (1.1 mm) and worst in the anterior portion of the C-arm CT volumes (4.4 mm). A visual inspection of volume renderings shows satisfactory bone removal in 97% of cases, 70% of which show complete bone removal.
Keywords :
blood vessels; bone; computerised tomography; drug delivery systems; drugs; image segmentation; liver; medical image processing; physiological models; rendering (computer graphics); tumours; 3D TACE planning; 3D liver TACE planning; C-arm CT volume; anterior portion; automatic bone removal; chemotherapeutic agent; contrast-enhanced C-arm computed tomography; distance 1.1 mm; distance 2.7 mm; distance 4.4 mm; embolic agent; internal organ; liver tumor feeding vessel; manual segmentation; mean mesh-to-mesh distance; spine area; surrounding bone structure effect; target image; targeted catheter-based injection; transarterial chemoembolization; tumor feeding vessel identification; tumor feeding vessel segmentation; tumor three-dimensional imaging; unobstructed vessel visualization; vessel three-dimensional imaging; visceral cavity model; volume rendering visual inspection; volume visualization method; Adaptation models; Bones; Computed tomography; Image segmentation; Ribs; Training; Visualization; Angiography; Computed Tomography; Image Segmentation; Oncology;
Conference_Titel :
Biomedical Imaging (ISBI), 2013 IEEE 10th International Symposium on
Conference_Location :
San Francisco, CA
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4673-6456-0
DOI :
10.1109/ISBI.2013.6556797