4.5 Article

MRI-based synthetic CT of the lumbar spine: Geometric measurements for surgery planning in comparison with CT

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF RADIOLOGY
Volume 144, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejrad.2021.109999

Keywords

Lumbar spine; CT; MRI; Deep learning

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This study demonstrated the equivalency of MRI-based synthetic CT to conventional CT in geometric measurements of the lumbar spine, showing good reliability. This opens up new possibilities for diagnosis and surgical planning without ionizing radiation, while combining soft tissue information from conventional MRI.
Purpose: MRI is the imaging modality of choice for soft tissue-related spine disease. However, CT is superior to MRI in providing clear visualization of bony morphology. The purpose of this study is to test equivalency of MRIbased synthetic CT to conventional CT in quantitatively assessing bony morphology of the lumbar spine. Method: A prospective study with an equivalency design was performed. Adult patients who had undergone MRI and CT of the lumbar spine were included. Synthetic CT images were generated from MRI using a deep learningbased image synthesis method. Two readers independently measured pedicle width, spinal canal width, neuroforamen length, anterior and posterior vertebral body height, superior and inferior vertebral body length, superior and inferior vertebral body width, maximal disc height, lumbar curvature and spinous process length on synthetic CT and CT. The agreement among CT and synthetic CT was evaluated using equivalency statistical testing. Results: Thirty participants were included (14 men and 16 women, range 20-60 years). The measurements performed on synthetic CT of pedicle width, spinal canal width, vertebral body height, vertebral body width, vertebral body length and spinous process length were statistically equivalent to CT measurements at the considered margins. Excellent inter- and intra-reader reliability was found for both synthetic CT and CT. Conclusions: Equivalency of MRI-based synthetic CT to CT was demonstrated on geometrical measurements in the lumbar spine. In combination with the soft tissue information of the conventional MRI, this provides new possibilities in diagnosis and surgical planning without ionizing radiation.

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