CArdiac and REspiratory adaptive Computed Tomography (CARE-CT): a proof-of-concept digital phantom study.
Natasha MortonPaul J KeallRicky O'BrienTess ReynoldsPublished in: Physical and engineering sciences in medicine (2022)
Current respiratory 4DCT imaging for high-dose rate thoracic radiotherapy treatments are negatively affected by the complex interaction of cardiac and respiratory motion. We propose an imaging method to reduce artifacts caused by thoracic motion, CArdiac and REspiratory adaptive CT (CARE-CT), that monitors respiratory motion and ECG signals in real-time, triggering CT acquisition during combined cardiac and respiratory bins. Using a digital phantom, conventional 4DCT and CARE-CT acquisitions for nineteen patient-measured physiological traces were simulated. Ten respiratory bins were acquired for conventional 4DCT scans and ten respiratory bins during cardiac diastole were acquired for CARE-CT scans. Image artifacts were quantified for 10 common thoracic organs at risk (OAR) substructures using the differential normalized cross correlation between axial slices (ΔNCC), mean squared error (MSE) and sensitivity. For all images, on average, CARE-CT improved the ΔNCC for 18/19 and the MSE and sensitivity for all patient traces. The ΔNCC was reduced for all cardiac OARs (mean reduction 21%). The MSE was reduced for all OARs (mean reduction 36%). In the digital phantom study, the average scan time was increased from 1.8 ± 0.4 min to 7.5 ± 2.2 min with a reduction in average beam on time from 98 ± 28 s to 45 s using CARE-CT compared to conventional 4DCT. The proof-of-concept study indicates the potential for CARE-CT to image the thorax in real-time during the cardiac and respiratory cycle simultaneously, to reduce image artifacts for common thoracic OARs.
Keyphrases
- image quality
- dual energy
- computed tomography
- contrast enhanced
- healthcare
- palliative care
- positron emission tomography
- left ventricular
- quality improvement
- high dose
- spinal cord
- deep learning
- respiratory tract
- squamous cell carcinoma
- affordable care act
- early stage
- radiation therapy
- blood pressure
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- machine learning
- heart rate variability
- convolutional neural network
- radiation induced
- magnetic resonance