Presentation + Paper
9 March 2018 High-resolution extremity cone-beam CT with a CMOS detector: evaluation of a clinical prototype in quantitative assessment of bone microarchitecture
Q. Cao, M. Brehler, A. Sisniega, S. Tilley II, M. M. Shiraz Bhurwani, J. W. Stayman, J. Yorkston, J. H. Siewerdsen, W. Zbijewski
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Purpose: A prototype high-resolution extremity cone-beam CT (CBCT) system based on a CMOS detector was developed to support quantitative in vivo assessment of bone microarchitecture. We compare the performance of CMOS CBCT to an amorphous silicon (a-Si:H) FPD extremity CBCT in imaging of trabecular bone.

Methods: The prototype CMOS-based CBCT involves a DALSA Xineos3030 detector (99 μm pixels) with 400 μm-thick CsI scintillator and a compact 0.3 FS rotating anode x-ray source. We compare the performance of CMOS CBCT to an a- Si:H FPD scanner built on a similar gantry, but using a Varian PaxScan2530 detector with 0.137 mm pixels and a 0.5 FS stationary anode x-ray source. Experimental studies include measurements of Modulation Transfer Function (MTF) for the detectors and in 3D image reconstructions. Image quality in clinical scenarios is evaluated in scans of a cadaver ankle. Metrics of trabecular microarchitecture (BV/TV, Bone Volume/Total Volume, TbSp, Trabecular Spacing, and TbTh, trabecular thickness) are obtained in a human ulna using CMOS CBCT and a-Si:H FPD CBCT and compared to gold standard μCT.

Results: The CMOS detector achieves ~40% increase in the f20 value (frequency at which MTF reduces to 0.20) compared to the a-Si:H FPD. In the reconstruction domain, the FWHM of a 127 μm tungsten wire is also improved by ~40%. Reconstructions of a cadaveric ankle reveal enhanced modulation of trabecular structures with the CMOS detector and soft-tissue visibility that is similar to that of the a-Si:H FPD system. Correlations of the metrics of bone microarchitecture with gold-standard μCT are improved with CMOS CBCT: from 0.93 to 0.98 for BV/TV, from 0.49 to 0.74 for TbTh, and from 0.9 to 0.96 for TbSp.

Conclusion: Adoption of a CMOS detector in extremity CBCT improved spatial resolution and enhanced performance in metrics of bone microarchitecture compared to a conventional a-Si:H FPD. The results support development of clinical applications of CMOS CBCT in quantitative imaging of bone health.
Conference Presentation
© (2018) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Q. Cao, M. Brehler, A. Sisniega, S. Tilley II, M. M. Shiraz Bhurwani, J. W. Stayman, J. Yorkston, J. H. Siewerdsen, and W. Zbijewski "High-resolution extremity cone-beam CT with a CMOS detector: evaluation of a clinical prototype in quantitative assessment of bone microarchitecture", Proc. SPIE 10573, Medical Imaging 2018: Physics of Medical Imaging, 105730R (9 March 2018); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2293810
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Bone

CMOS sensors

Image segmentation

Prototyping

Sensors

Scanners

Modulation transfer functions

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