4.6 Article

Estimating lung ventilation directly from 4D CT Hounsfield unit values

Journal

MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume 43, Issue 1, Pages 33-43

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1118/1.4937599

Keywords

lung cancer; CT ventilation imaging; PET ventilation; 4DCT; deformable image registration

Funding

  1. Cancer Institute NSW Early Career Fellowship
  2. Cancer Australia Priority-driven Collaborative Cancer Research Scheme [2013 APP1060919]
  3. NHMRC Australia Fellowship

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Purpose: Computed tomography ventilation imaging (CTVI) aims to visualize air-volume changes in the lung by quantifying respiratory motion in 4DCT using deformable image registration (DIR). A problem is that DIR-based CTVI is sensitive both to 4DCT image artifacts and DIR parameters, hindering clinical validation of the technique. To address this, the authors present a streamlined CTVI approach that estimates blood-gas exchange in terms of time-averaged 4DCT Hounsfield unit (HU) values without relying on DIR. The purpose of this study is to quantify the accuracy of the HU-based CTVI method using high-resolution Ga-68 positron emission tomography (Galligas PET) scans in lung cancer patients. Methods: The authors analyzed Galligas 4D-PET/CT scans acquired for 25 lung cancer patients at up to three imaging timepoints during lung cancer radiation therapy. For each 4DCT scan, the authors produced three types of CTVIs: (i) the new method (CTVI(HU) over bar), which takes the 4D time-averaged product of regional air and tissue densities at each voxel, and compared this to DIR-based estimates of (ii) breathing-induced density changes (CTVIDIR-HU), and (iii) breathing-induced volume changes (CTVIDIR-Jac) between the exhale/inhale phase images. The authors quantified the accuracy of CTVI(HU) over bar, CTVIDIR-HU and CTVIDIR-Jac versus Galligas PET in terms of voxel-wise Spearman correlation (r) and the separation of mean voxel values between clinically defined defect/nondefect regions. Results: Averaged over 62 scans, CTVI(HU) over bar showed better accuracy than CTVIDIR-HU and CTVIDIR-Jac in terms of Spearman correlation with Galligas PET, with (mean +/- SD) r values of (0.50 +/- 0.17), (0.42 +/- 0.20), and (0.19 +/- 0.23), respectively. A two-sample Kolmogorov-Smirnov test indicates that CTVI(HU) over bar shows statistically significant separation of mean ventilation values between clinical defect/nondefect regions. Qualitatively, CTVI(HU) over bar appears concordant with Galligas PET for emphysema related defects, but differences arise in tumor-obstructed regions (where aeration is overestimated due to motion blur) and for other abnormal morphology (e.g., fluid-filled or peritumoral lung with HU greater than or similar to -600) where the assumptions of the HU model may break down. Conclusions: The HU-based CTVI method can improve voxel-wise correlations with Galligas PET compared to DIR-based methods and may be a useful approximation for voxels with HU values in the range (-1000, -600). With further clinical verification, HU-based CTVI could provide a straightforward and reproducible means to estimate lung ventilation using free-breathing 4DCT. (C) 2016 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available