1. Field of the Invention
The present invention concerns a method for facilitating comparison of medical image data with reference images, or with a clinician's own “mental” reference image template.
2. Description of the Prior Art
For some medical imaging procedures the reconstructed patient data can undergo standardized processing to support diagnosis. For example, following an ioflupane iodine-123 injection (DaTSCAN) SPECT, striatal uptake can be assessed on a ‘slab’ view of a patient image constructed by averaging the background-normalized uptake over the set of axial slices covering the striatum.
This slab view may then be reviewed by a clinician either by comparison to their own “mental” set of reference images representing different disease states, or alternatively by visual comparison to a set of reference images presented to the clinician that are representative of patients having different disease states.
To facilitate these comparisons, it is important to minimize any visual differences between images being compared (here, the slab view and the reference images) that are due to differences in scanner hardware (e.g., resolution, sensitivity) and reconstruction protocol (e.g., reconstruction algorithm, scatter correction method etc). Such differences can significantly impact the measured uptake in the striatum, and therefore clinical interpretation, even following conventional background-normalization.
Clinical guidelines advise that the same scanner hardware and reconstruction protocol combination (this combination may be referred to hereinafter as a ‘system’) should be used for patient studies that are compared, e.g. for monitoring a response to therapy. If such an approach is followed, no further standardization would be required; however, in practice it is often infeasible with different sites having different hardware and software systems, along with different preferences for reconstruction. Furthermore, for the case of comparison to reference images of disease states, it would either restrict patient images to be acquired and reconstructed on a specific system, or require the reference images be provided for every combination of hardware and software. Clearly, neither option is practical.
An alternative approach would be to use a technology such as described in UK patent application GB2469569 which applies a phantom-derived filter to align the quantitative (i.e., contrast recovery) performance of a scanner/reconstruction combination to a global standard. This method, however, is designed to standardize quantitative performance across systems rather than facilitate visual comparison between reference and patient images acquired on different systems, which is an aim of the present invention.
A method according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention includes the following:
Such post-processing methods are then applied to reconstructed patient image(s) from ‘system B’ to align image quality to the reference image(s) from ‘system A’.
Alternatively, the post-processing methods may be applied to the reconstructed reference image(s) from ‘system A’ to align image quality to the patient image(s) from ‘system B’.
In another alternative, the post-processing methods can be applied to both the reference image(s) from ‘system A’, and the patient image(s) from ‘system B’ to align image quality.
The window-level or LUT (Look Up Table) used to display the patient image data from ‘system B’ could be adjusted to improve visual comparability with the reference image(s) from ‘system A’. Alternatively, the window-level or LUT used to display the reference image(s) from ‘system A’ could be adjusted to improve visual comparability with the patient image from ‘system B’.
The present invention can be explained considering the following scenario. In this case, reference images are acquired on a state-of-the-art system, producing images with high contrast recovery and fine texture. However, patient images are acquired on an older system, producing smoother images with lower contrast recovery.
According to certain embodiments of the present invention, one or more of the following options may be provided to facilitate visual comparison between such combination of reference and patient images:
Such options are not exhaustive, and alternative post-processing techniques could be applied to align the image quality of images produced by the two systems. For example, non-Gaussian smoothing filters, alternative deconvolution or de-noising methods etc.
Multiple versions of the reconstructed reference images could be stored and made available which may improve the ability of the invention to align image quality of the reference and patient images. The discussed post-processing techniques may be applied to such multiple versions. The multiple versions may be reconstructed with, for example, different algorithms or numbers of iterations/subsets/counts etc.
The methodology of the present invention could be applied to images from other nuclear medicine procedures in which comparison to a set of reference images of different disease states is desirable.
The invention also encompasses a computerized system for processing and displaying patient images obtained using a first scanner/reconstruction protocol combination (‘system’) for comparison with reference images of different disease states acquired on a scanner using a second scanner/reconstruction protocol combination (‘system’). An image quality performance of the second system is characterized using a reference object, hereafter referred to as a phantom. An image quality performance of the first system is characterized using the same phantom. The phantom-derived characterization of image quality performance of the respective protocols may then be used to:
Although modifications and changes may be suggested by those skilled in the art, it is the intention of the inventors to embody within the patent warranted hereon all changes and modifications as reasonably and properly come within the scope of their contribution to the art.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1210173.9 | Jun 2012 | GB | national |