IVCVDec 3, 2021

View-Consistent Metal Segmentation in the Projection Domain for Metal Artifact Reduction in CBCT -- An Investigation of Potential Improvement

arXiv:2112.02101v17 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses metal artifact reduction in medical CBCT imaging for trauma evaluation, showing incremental improvement over existing methods.

The paper tackles metal artifact reduction in CBCT imaging by shifting metal segmentation from 3D volume thresholding to a learning-based, view-consistent 2D projection method, achieving up to roughly 3 dB mean PSNR improvement overall and up to 9 dB for single slices on real cadaver data.

The positive outcome of a trauma intervention depends on an intraoperative evaluation of inserted metallic implants. Due to occurring metal artifacts, the quality of this evaluation heavily depends on the performance of so-called Metal Artifact Reduction methods (MAR). The majority of these MAR methods require prior segmentation of the inserted metal objects. Therefore, typically a rather simple thresholding-based segmentation method in the reconstructed 3D volume is applied, despite some major disadvantages. With this publication, the potential of shifting the segmentation task to a learning-based, view-consistent 2D projection-based method on the downstream MAR's outcome is investigated. For segmenting the present metal, a rather simple learning-based 2D projection-wise segmentation network that is trained using real data acquired during cadaver studies, is examined. To overcome the disadvantages that come along with a 2D projection-wise segmentation, a Consistency Filter is proposed. The influence of the shifted segmentation domain is investigated by comparing the results of the standard fsMAR with a modified fsMAR version using the new segmentation masks. With a quantitative and qualitative evaluation on real cadaver data, the investigated approach showed an increased MAR performance and a high insensitivity against metal artifacts. For cases with metal outside the reconstruction's FoV or cases with vanishing metal, a significant reduction in artifacts could be shown. Thus, increases of up to roughly 3 dB w.r.t. the mean PSNR metric over all slices and up to 9 dB for single slices were achieved. The shown results reveal a beneficial influence of the shift to a 2D-based segmentation method on real data for downstream use with a MAR method, like the fsMAR.

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