학술논문

A Task-Dependent Investigation on Dose and Texture in CT Image Reconstruction
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Radiation and Plasma Medical Sciences IEEE Trans. Radiat. Plasma Med. Sci. Radiation and Plasma Medical Sciences, IEEE Transactions on. 4(4):441-449 Jul, 2020
Subject
Nuclear Engineering
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Image reconstruction
Task analysis
Computed tomography
Lung
Reconstruction algorithms
Cancer
X-ray imaging
Low-dose computed tomography (LdCT)
lung cancer
nodule characterization
nodule localization
texture-enhanced image reconstruction
tissue texture
Language
ISSN
2469-7311
2469-7303
Abstract
Localizing and characterizing clinically significant lung nodules, a potential precursor to lung cancer, at the lowest achievable radiation dose is demanded to minimize the stochastic radiation effects from X-ray computed tomography (CT). A minimal dose level is heavily dependent on the image reconstruction algorithms and clinical task, in which the tissue texture always plays an important role. This article aims to investigate the dependence through a task-based evaluation at multiple dose levels and variable textures in reconstructions with prospective patient studies. One hundred and thirty three patients with a suspicious pulmonary nodule scheduled for biopsy were recruited and the data was acquired at 120 kVp with three different dose levels of 100, 40, and 20 mAs. Three reconstruction algorithms were implemented: 1) analytical filtered back-projection (FBP) with optimal noise filtering; 2) statistical Markov random field (MRF) model with optimal Huber weighting (MRF-H) for piecewise smooth reconstruction; and 3) tissue-specific texture model (MRF-T) for texture preserved statistical reconstruction. Experienced thoracic radiologists reviewed and scored all images at random, blind to the CT dose and reconstruction algorithms. The radiologists identified the nodules in each image, including the 133 biopsy target nodules and 66 other nontarget nodules. For target nodule characterization, only MRF-T at 40 mAs showed no statistically significant difference from FBP at 100 mAs. For localizing both the target nodules and the nontarget nodules, some as small as 3 mm, MRF-T at 40 and 20 mAs levels showed no statistically significant difference from FBP at 100 mAs, respectively. MRF-H and FBP at 40 and 20 mAs levels performed statistically differently from FBP at 100 mAs. This investigation concluded that: 1) the textures in the MRF-T reconstructions improves both the tasks of localizing and characterizing nodules at low-dose CT and 2) the task of characterizing nodules is more challenging than the task of localizing nodules and needs more dose or enhanced textures from the reconstruction.