Title :
A Comparison Framework for Breathing Motion Estimation Methods From 4-D Imaging
Author :
Sarrut, David ; Delhay, Bertrand ; Villard, Pierre-Frédéric ; Boldea, Vlad ; Beuve, Michael ; Clarysse, Patrick
Author_Institution :
Leon Berard Cancer Center, Lyon
Abstract :
Motion estimation is an important issue in radiation therapy of moving organs. In particular, motion estimates from 4-D imaging can be used to compute the distribution of an absorbed dose during the therapeutic irradiation. We propose a strategy and criteria incorporating spatiotemporal information to evaluate the accuracy of model-based methods capturing breathing motion from 4-D CT images. This evaluation relies on the identification and tracking of landmarks on the 4-D CT images by medical experts. Three different experts selected more than 500 landmarks within 4-D CT images of lungs for three patients. Landmark tracking was performed at four instants of the expiration phase. Two metrics are proposed to evaluate the tracking performance of motion-estimation models. The first metric cumulates over the four instants the errors on landmark location. The second metric integrates the error over a time interval according to an a priori breathing model for the landmark spatiotemporal trajectory. This latter metric better takes into account the dynamics of the motion. A second aim of this paper is to estimate the impact of considering several phases of the respiratory cycle as compared to using only the extreme phases (end-inspiration and end-expiration). The accuracy of three motion estimation models (two image registration-based methods and a biomechanical method) is compared through the proposed metrics and statistical tools. This paper points out the interest of taking into account more frames for reliably tracking the respiratory motion.
Keywords :
computerised tomography; image motion analysis; lung; medical image processing; pneumodynamics; radiation therapy; 4D CT imaging; 4D imaging; absorbed dose distribution; breathing motion estimation method; computerized tomography; lung images; organ movement; radiation therapy; respiratory motion; spatiotemporal trajectory; therapeutic irradiation; Deformable registration; Validation; radiotherapy; thorax; validation; Algorithms; Artifacts; Exhalation; Humans; Imaging, Three-Dimensional; Lung; Models, Biological; Movement; Pattern Recognition, Automated; Radiotherapy Planning, Computer-Assisted; Reproducibility of Results; Sensitivity and Specificity; Time Factors; Tomography, X-Ray Computed;
Journal_Title :
Medical Imaging, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TMI.2007.901006