4.6 Article

Segmentation of nodules on chest computed tomography for growth assessment

Journal

MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume 31, Issue 4, Pages 839-848

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1118/1.1656593

Keywords

computer-aided diagnosis; lung cancer; shape analysis; 3D algorithms; phantom study; volume effects; computed tomography; image segmentation

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Several segmentation methods to evaluate growth of small isolated pulmonary nodules on chest computed tomography (CT) are presented. The segmentation methods are based on adaptively thresholding attenuation levels and use measures of nodule shape. The segmentation methods were first tested on a realistic chest phantom to evaluate their performance with respect to specific nodule characteristics. The segmentation methods were also tested on sequential CT scans of patients. The methods' estimation of nodule growth were compared to the volume change calculated by a chest radiologist. The best method segmented nodules on average 43% smaller or larger than the actual nodule when errors were computed across all nodule variations on the phantom. Some methods achieved smaller errors when examined with respect to certain nodule properties. In particular, on the phantom individual methods segmented solid nodules to within 23% of their actual size and nodules with 60.7 mm(3) volumes to within 14%. On the clinical data, none of the methods examined showed a statistically significant difference in growth estimation from the radiologist. (C) 2004 American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

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