4.5 Article

Robust three-dimensional registration on optical coherence tomography angiography for speckle reduction and visualization

Journal

QUANTITATIVE IMAGING IN MEDICINE AND SURGERY
Volume 11, Issue 3, Pages 879-894

Publisher

AME PUBL CO
DOI: 10.21037/qims-20-751

Keywords

Optical coherence tomography (OCT); optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA); motion artifact; speckle noise; averaging; 3D registration

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. National Eye Institute [R01-EY028753]
  3. Carl Zeiss Meditec Inc.
  4. Research to Prevent Blindness, Inc., New York, NY, USA

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The proposed 3D registration and averaging method significantly improved vessel connectivity and signal to noise ratio in the imaging performance, with an increase in all assessed metrics such as SNR, PSNR, and NCC with the increase in repeated volume averaging. An improvement of SNR from 10 to 40 dB was achieved after 10 repeated volumetric averaging, demonstrating the effectiveness of the method in reducing speckle noises and motion artifacts.
Background: In the clinical applications of optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA), the repeated scanning and averaging method can provide better contrast with reduced speckle noises in the final results, which are useful for visualizing and quantifying vascular components with high accuracy, reproducibility, and reliability. However, the inevitable patient motion presents a challenge to this method. The objective of this study is to meet this challenge by introducing a 3D registration method to register optical coherence tomography (OCT)/OCTA scans for precise volume averaging of multiple scans to improve the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and increase quantification accuracy. Methods: The proposed method utilized both rigid affine transformation and non-rigid B-spline transformation in which their parameters were optimized and calculated by the average stochastic gradient descent on OCT structural images. In addition, we also introduced a multi-level resolution approach to further improve the robustness and computational speed of our proposed method. The imaging performance was tested on in vivo imaging of human skin and eye and assessed by SNR, peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) and normalized correlation coefficient (NCC). Results: Five subjects were enrolled in this study for obtaining in vivo images of skin and retina. The proposed registration and averaging method provided substantial improvements of the imaging performance in terms of vessel connectivity and signal to noise ratio. The increase of repeated volume numbers in the averaging improves all the metrics assessed, i.e., SNR, PSNR and NCC. An improvement of the SNR from 10 to 40 dB after 10 repeated volumetric averaging was achieved. Conclusions: The proposed 3D registration and averaging method is effective in reducing speckle noises and suppressing motion artifacts, thereby improving SNR, PSNR and NCC metrics for final averaged images. It is expected that the proposed algorithm would be practically useful in better visualization and more reliable quantification of in vivo OCT and OCTA data, which would be beneficial to OCT clinical applications.

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