Lung texture in serial thoracic CT scans: Assessment of change introduced by image registration

被引:28
|
作者
Cunliffe, Alexandra R. [1 ]
Al-Hallaq, Hania A. [2 ]
Labby, Zacariah E. [1 ]
Pelizzari, Charles A. [2 ]
Straus, Christopher [1 ]
Sensakovic, William F. [1 ]
Ludwig, Michelle [1 ]
Armato, Samuel G., III [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Chicago, Dept Radiol, Chicago, IL 60637 USA
[2] Univ Chicago, Dept Radiat & Cellular Oncol, Chicago, IL 60637 USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院; 美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
texture analysis; image registration; lung; CT; DEFORMABLE REGISTRATION; NONRIGID REGISTRATION; COMPUTERIZED ANALYSIS; DISEASE; CLASSIFICATION; RADIOTHERAPY; ALGORITHM; DIAGNOSIS; HYBRID;
D O I
10.1118/1.4730505
中图分类号
R8 [特种医学]; R445 [影像诊断学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100207 ; 1009 ;
摘要
Purpose: The aim of this study was to quantify the effect of four image registration methods on lung texture features extracted from serial computed tomography (CT) scans obtained from healthy human subjects. Methods: Two chest CT scans acquired at different time points were collected retrospectively for each of 27 patients. Following automated lung segmentation, each follow-up CT scan was registered to the baseline scan using four algorithms: (1) rigid, (2) affine, (3) B-splines deformable, and (4) demons deformable. The registration accuracy for each scan pair was evaluated by measuring the Euclidean distance between 150 identified landmarks. On average, 1432 spatially matched 32 x 32-pixel region-of-interest (ROT) pairs were automatically extracted from each scan pair. First-order, fractal, Fourier, Laws' filter, and gray-level co-occurrence matrix texture features were calculated in each ROI, for a total of 140 features. Agreement between baseline and follow-up scan ROT feature values was assessed by Bland-Altman analysis for each feature; the range spanned by the 95% limits of agreement of feature value differences was calculated and normalized by the average feature value to obtain the normalized range of agreement (nRoA). Features with small nRoA were considered "registration-stable." The normalized bias for each feature was calculated from the feature value differences between baseline and follow-up scans averaged across all ROIs in every patient. Because patients had "normal" chest CT scans, minimal change in texture feature values between scan pairs was anticipated, with the expectation of small bias and narrow limits of agreement. Results: Registration with demons reduced the Euclidean distance between landmarks such that only 9% of landmarks were separated by >= 1 mm, compared with rigid (98%), affine (95%), and B-splines (90%). Ninety-nine of the 140 (71%) features analyzed yielded nRoA > 50% for all registration methods, indicating that the majority of feature values were perturbed following registration. Nineteen of the features (14%) had nRoA < 15% following demons registration, indicating relative feature value stability. Student's t-tests showed that the nRoA of these 19 features was significantly larger when rigid, affine, or B-splines registration methods were used compared with demons registration. Demons registration yielded greater normalized bias in feature value change than B-splines registration, though this difference was not significant (p = 0.15). Conclusions: Demons registration provided higher spatial accuracy between matched anatomic landmarks in serial CT scans than rigid, affine, or B-splines algorithms. Texture feature changes calculated in healthy lung tissue from serial CT scans were smaller following demons registration compared with all other algorithms. Though registration altered the values of the majority of texture features, 19 features remained relatively stable after demons registration, indicating their potential for detecting pathologic change in serial CT scans. Combined use of accurate deformable registration using demons and texture analysis may allow for quantitative evaluation of local changes in lung tissue due to disease progression or treatment response. (C) 2012 American Association of Physicists in Medicine. [http://dx.doi.org/10.1118/1.4730505]
引用
收藏
页码:4679 / 4690
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Lung texture in serial thoracic CT scans: Registration- based methods to compare anatomically matched regions
    Cunliffe, Alexandra R.
    Armato, Samuel G., III
    Fei, Xianhan M.
    Tuohy, Rachel E.
    Al-Hallaq, Hania A.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2013, 40 (06)
  • [2] Comparison of demons deformable registration-based methods for texture analysis of serial thoracic CT scans
    Cunliffe, Alexandra R.
    Al-Hallaq, Hania A.
    Fei, Xianhan M.
    Tuohy, Rachel E.
    Armato, Samuel G., III
    MEDICAL IMAGING 2013: COMPUTER-AIDED DIAGNOSIS, 2013, 8670
  • [3] Comparison of Two Deformable Registration Algorithms in the Presence of Radiologic Change Between Serial Lung CT Scans
    Alexandra R. Cunliffe
    Bradley White
    Julia Justusson
    Christopher Straus
    Renuka Malik
    Hania A. Al-Hallaq
    Samuel G. Armato
    Journal of Digital Imaging, 2015, 28 : 755 - 760
  • [4] Comparison of Two Deformable Registration Algorithms in the Presence of Radiologic Change Between Serial Lung CT Scans
    Cunliffe, Alexandra R.
    White, Bradley
    Justusson, Julia
    Straus, Christopher
    Malik, Renuka
    Al-Hallaq, Hania A.
    Armato, Samuel G., III
    JOURNAL OF DIGITAL IMAGING, 2015, 28 (06) : 755 - 760
  • [5] Effect of deformable registration on the dose calculated in radiation therapy planning CT scans of lung cancer patients
    Cunliffe, Alexandra R.
    Contee, Clay
    Armato, Samuel G., III
    White, Bradley
    Justusson, Julia
    Malik, Renuka
    Al-Hallaq, Hania A.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2015, 42 (01) : 391 - 399
  • [6] Lung texture in serial thoracic CT scans: correlation with radiologist-defined severity of acute changes following radiation therapy
    Cunliffe, Alexandra R.
    Armato, Samuel G., III
    Straus, Christopher
    Malik, Renuka
    Al-Hallaq, Hania A.
    PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2014, 59 (18) : 5387 - 5398
  • [7] Location registration and recognition (LRR) for serial analysis of nodules in lung CT scans
    Sofka, Michal
    Stewart, Charles V.
    MEDICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS, 2010, 14 (03) : 407 - 428
  • [8] Mass preserving image registration for lung CT
    Gorbunova, Vladlena
    Sporring, Jon
    Lo, Pechin
    Loeve, Martine
    Tiddens, Harm A.
    Nielsen, Mads
    Dirksen, Asger
    de Bruijne, Marleen
    MEDICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS, 2012, 16 (04) : 786 - 795
  • [9] Lung Texture in Serial Thoracic Computed Tomography Scans: Correlation of Radiomics-based Features With Radiation Therapy Dose and Radiation Pneumonitis Development
    Cunliffe, Alexandra
    Armato, Samuel G., III
    Castillo, Richard
    Ngoc Pham
    Guerrero, Thomas
    Al-Hallaq, Hania A.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF RADIATION ONCOLOGY BIOLOGY PHYSICS, 2015, 91 (05): : 1048 - 1056
  • [10] Detection of vessel bifurcations in CT scans for automatic objective assessment of deformable image registration accuracy
    Cazoulat, Guillaume
    Anderson, Brian M.
    McCulloch, Molly M.
    Rigaud, Bastien
    Koay, Eugene J.
    Brock, Kristy K.
    MEDICAL PHYSICS, 2021, 48 (10) : 5935 - 5946