CVFeb 27, 2017

Multi-scale Image Fusion Between Pre-operative Clinical CT and X-ray Microtomography of Lung Pathology

arXiv:1702.08155v11 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of fusing multi-scale medical images for lung cancer analysis, which is incremental as it builds on existing registration methods with specific adaptations.

The paper tackled the problem of aligning clinical CT and μCT images of lung cancer tissue to enable multi-scale analysis, achieving a reduction in average minimum surface distance from 3.3 mm to 2.3 mm.

Computational anatomy allows the quantitative analysis of organs in medical images. However, most analysis is constrained to the millimeter scale because of the limited resolution of clinical computed tomography (CT). X-ray microtomography ($μ$CT) on the other hand allows imaging of ex-vivo tissues at a resolution of tens of microns. In this work, we use clinical CT to image lung cancer patients before partial pneumonectomy (resection of pathological lung tissue). The resected specimen is prepared for $μ$CT imaging at a voxel resolution of 50 $μ$m (0.05 mm). This high-resolution image of the lung cancer tissue allows further insides into understanding of tumor growth and categorization. For making full use of this additional information, image fusion (registration) needs to be performed in order to re-align the $μ$CT image with clinical CT. We developed a multi-scale non-rigid registration approach. After manual initialization using a few landmark points and rigid alignment, several levels of non-rigid registration between down-sampled (in the case of $μ$CT) and up-sampled (in the case of clinical CT) representations of the image are performed. Any non-lung tissue is ignored during the computation of the similarity measure used to guide the registration during optimization. We are able to recover the volume differences introduced by the resection and preparation of the lung specimen. The average ($\pm$ std. dev.) minimum surface distance between $μ$CT and clinical CT at the resected lung surface is reduced from 3.3 $\pm$ 2.9 (range: [0.1, 15.9]) to 2.3 mm $\pm$ 2.8 (range: [0.0, 15.3]) mm. The alignment of clinical CT with $μ$CT will allow further registration with even finer resolutions of $μ$CT (up to 10 $μ$m resolution) and ultimately with histopathological microscopy images for further macro to micro image fusion that can aid medical image analysis.

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