학술논문

Evaluation of the BreastSimulator software platform for breast tomography
Document Type
article
Source
Physics in Medicine and Biology. 62(16)
Subject
Biomedical Imaging
Breast Cancer
Cancer
Networking and Information Technology R&D (NITRD)
Bioengineering
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies
Algorithms
Breast
Computer Simulation
Female
Humans
Mammography
Phantoms
Imaging
Software
Tomography Scanners
X-Ray Computed
Tomography
X-Ray Computed
breast CT
breast model
software simulation
anatomical structure
Other Physical Sciences
Biomedical Engineering
Clinical Sciences
Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Language
Abstract
The aim of this work was the evaluation of the software BreastSimulator, a breast x-ray imaging simulation software, as a tool for the creation of 3D uncompressed breast digital models and for the simulation and the optimization of computed tomography (CT) scanners dedicated to the breast. Eight 3D digital breast phantoms were created with glandular fractions in the range 10%-35%. The models are characterised by different sizes and modelled realistic anatomical features. X-ray CT projections were simulated for a dedicated cone-beam CT scanner and reconstructed with the FDK algorithm. X-ray projection images were simulated for 5 mono-energetic (27, 32, 35, 43 and 51 keV) and 3 poly-energetic x-ray spectra typically employed in current CT scanners dedicated to the breast (49, 60, or 80 kVp). Clinical CT images acquired from two different clinical breast CT scanners were used for comparison purposes. The quantitative evaluation included calculation of the power-law exponent, β, from simulated and real breast tomograms, based on the power spectrum fitted with a function of the spatial frequency, f, of the form S(f)  =  α/f   β . The breast models were validated by comparison against clinical breast CT and published data. We found that the calculated β coefficients were close to that of clinical CT data from a dedicated breast CT scanner and reported data in the literature. In evaluating the software package BreastSimulator to generate breast models suitable for use with breast CT imaging, we found that the breast phantoms produced with the software tool can reproduce the anatomical structure of real breasts, as evaluated by calculating the β exponent from the power spectral analysis of simulated images. As such, this research tool might contribute considerably to the further development, testing and optimisation of breast CT imaging techniques.