The present invention relates generally to medical diagnostics and treatments assessment and, more particularly, to a medical diagnostic and assessment tool simultaneously and interactively displaying anatomical and functional information for a plurality of patient medical exams. The anatomical and functional information includes image and quantitative data acquired from a patient over a period of time and aids a physician in establishing treatment for a particular abnormality or pathology and assessing the effectiveness of that treatment.
It is not uncommon for a single patient to undergo a multitude of imaging exams, whether in a single doctor's visit, in a hospital stay, or even over the course of a lifetime. This is particularly likely when a patient undergoes a series of “tests” and scans to investigate a recently onset or previously undetected condition, such as cancer or dementia. It is increasingly common for a patient to be subjected to multiple scans across multiple modalities because each exam can provide different pieces of information. For example, during a single doctor's visit or hospital stay, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), x-ray, or computed tomography (CT) can be used to acquire images that provide anatomical information, while positron emission tomography (PET) or functional MRI can be used to acquire images that provide functional information. The anatomical information providing insight into the anatomical makeup of the patient and the functional information providing insight into the functionality of a given anatomical structure, especially when subjected to a stimulus. Moreover, the combination of anatomical and functional information is not only advantageous in detecting a new pathology or abnormality, but the respective images, when taken over the course of an illness, for example, may show growth of lesions, responses to treatments, and disease progression. To assist in the analysis of anatomical and functional information, programs have been constructed that register an anatomical and a functional image thereby showing, in a single image, both anatomical and functional information.
Many clinical applications analyze 2D or 3D image data to perform and capture quantitative analytics. These include detection and sizing of lung nodules (Advanced Lung Analysis), quantification of vessel curvature, diameter and tone (Advanced Vessel Analysis), cardiac vascular and function applications, navigation of the colon for detection of polyps (CT colonography), and the like. In addition, there are neurological disorders that are analyzed using comparison with normal cohorts and creation of deviation maps. Dedicated CT, MR, PET and nuclear medicine applications have been designed to output quantitative analytics from regions of interest (intensity, density (HU), specific uptake volume (SUV), distances, volumes, growth rates, pattern and/or texture recognition, functional information, etc.) to help in the diagnosis and management of patients. However, physicians lack tools to interact with quantitative data analysis for diagnosis and patient management. That is, quantitative information may be ascertainable in charts, etc., but the information is not readily accessible together with the corresponding images to the physician. As a result, the physician must reconcile the results of several tests, both in the images themselves and the resulting quantitative data, in a crude and predominantly manual manner. For example, physicians typically rely on the apparent anatomical size and shape of patient cancerous lesions when assessing response to a chosen treatment or therapy. However, functionality to measure, archive, and manage analytic data over time is limited.
It would therefore be desirable to have a system and method capable of displaying analytical data and the corresponding images from which the analytical data was captured to a physician to quantify response of a disease or lesion to treatment over time in an interactive manner.
The present invention provides a system and method of displaying analytical data and medical images interactively that overcomes the aforementioned drawbacks.
A real-time interactive data analysis management and review tool for managing disease and/or pathology response to treatment or therapy is presented. The invention involves the archival of quantitative analytics data for the purpose of immediate or long term retrieval for comparative review over time and the display of current quantitative analytic data in a usable format that offers quick comparisons to previous quantitative analytic data for informed patient management. The usable format may be displayed in tabular or graphical layouts. The tool can be incorporated in the clinician reading workflow to be positioned between analysis image review and structured patient reporting. Positioning in this manner will allow direct interaction between these two important reading workflow processes. By selecting and clicking on a localizer image, the tool will automatically hotlink to analysis review and display the image of interest in a primary focused viewport. Conversely, the physician will be able to propagate to the patient report one or more graphs or analytical data deemed related for report archival. The invention also includes an electronic datasheet for posting relevant measurements in a spreadsheet format specific to an application. In the PET/CT application example, SUV max, Functional Volume, Anatomical Volume, SUV Mean, % Volume Change, etc. are examples of measurements that are displayed. The datasheet allows the user to select any lesion of interest and hotlink to the book-marked image displayed in the analysis viewports for further visual analysis. The invention leverages graphical charts to show disease or lesion response to treatment. The invention also includes an interactive navigational interface that allows the user to quickly select chart, tables, and other quantitative data of interest. Localizer or thumbnail images can be selected and hotlink to the analysis review for a more detailed visual analysis of that specific disease or lesion. A thumbnail image reference is used for hotlinking to analysis or simply for a visual reference.
The invention further provides interactive data analysis between analysis image review and patient structured reporting. Thus, the invention is interactive with both these components of reading workflow. The invention also facilitates management of quantitative analytics associated with disease and lesion progression as well as disease and lesion response to medical or therapeutic treatment.
The invention is applicable to a number of physiological studies including oncology and neurology related pathologies. Current methods produce analytics from PET/SPECT images that show functional deviations in metabolic or perfusion rates from a normal cohort. These deviations are either displayed point-wise or ROI/VOI based on regions of a standardized brain, i.e., individual brain mapped to a standard atlas. In addition to PET this functional information can also be determined using fMRI. Neurological diseases, particularly dementia, i.e. Alzheimer's disease, also have anatomical markers as their indicators. These include atrophied regions in the brain, i.e. reduction of the hippocampus, as well as other changes to the brain anatomical regions that can be imaged using CT and/or MR and quantified using analysis tools. A similar transformation to the standardized space will allow for anatomical and functional information to be co-registered. With the invention, data analysis methodology allows for the anatomically relevant regions to be analyzed simultaneously using anatomical and functional attributes. Likewise, longitudinal studies can also be merged to allow for diagnosis, characterization of therapy response and/or treatment planning. This invention provides productivity tools for the streamlined data analysis of disparate information.
Therefore, in accordance with one aspect of the present invention, a computer-readable storage medium having a computer program stored thereon and representing a set of instructions is disclosed. The computer program when executed by the computer causes the computer to access a first set of data of a first data type and a second set of data of a second data type. The first set of data and the second set of data are acquired from an object of interest, and the first set of data is acquired in a first plurality of scans and the second set of data is acquired in a second, different from the first, plurality of scans. The set of instructions further causes the computer to display a change in the value of the quantitative metric between the first plurality and the second plurality of scans.
In accordance with another aspect, the invention includes a medical diagnostic tool having an image database configured to contain medical images of a patient acquired over a period of a time as well as an analytical data database configured to contain analytical data related to the medical images. A graphical user interface interactively displays the medical images from at least a pair of medical exams together with the analytical data related thereto, and allows real-time data analysis and review of changes in the medical images acquired over the period of time.
According to another aspect of the invention, a method of presenting medical information is provided. A history of patient medical imaging exams is acquired. At least one of quantitative anatomical data and quantitative functional data from the history of patient medical imaging exams is then accessed. At least one of the quantitative anatomical data and the quantitative functional data for at least two patient medical exams of the history of patient medical exams is displayed together with at least one fused image from the history of patient medical imaging exams to allow interactive assessment of time-elapsed changes of a patient. The fused image contains anatomical and functional information.
Various other features and advantages of the present invention will be made apparent from the following detailed description and the drawings.
The drawings illustrate one preferred embodiment presently contemplated for carrying out the invention.
In the drawings:
The drawings include exemplary graphical windows, graphical tables, graphical charts, and the like, flow charts and process maps illustrating various aspects of the invention.
Referring now to
The data window 14, which displays quantitative analytical data 16 captured from a history of medical exams stored in a database (not shown) or other image archive, enables a user to identify and select a listed pathology or abnormality 18 which automatically causes an image of the selected pathology or abnormality be recalled from an image database (not shown) and to appear in the images window, as will be described later. In one embodiment, the resulting images are displayed with segmentation so that the portion of the total image acquired from the patient corresponding to the selected abnormality or pathology is only displayed. Moreover, the interactive nature of the quantitative data allows the user to select and display anatomical, functional, or registered images in the images window.
In
In the example shown in
Referring now to
Each column in the tabular arrangement of corresponds to a different measured or computed parameter. In the illustrated example, the measured parameters include SUV max, SUV mean, Anatomical Volume, and Functional Volume. The quantitative data also includes computed values and those columns include % SUV Max Change, % Anatomical Volume Change, and % Functional Volume Change. It is understood that these measured and computed parameters are exemplary and that other or additional parameters may be used depending on the particulars of the imaging study and/or the medical condition under investigation. It is also contemplated that the parameters may be arranged in menus and, through a user-input, different menus can be displayed in window 14. In this regard, it is contemplated that fewer than all the parameters for a given study may be displayed at a time and the user can navigate through the menus in a conventional manner.
As also illustrated in
As described above, the data analysis tool 10 is interactive. In this regard, the tool allows a physician to interact with the quantitative data and the images to fully assess and treat a given patient. For example, referring to
As reference above, images 36, 38, 40, and 42 are functional images that are displayed because the physician selected a functional parameter on data window 14. In this regard, if the physician had selected cell 44, the images window would have been automatically updated to display anatomical images from the medical exam conducted at Time C for the same lesion. Thus, through inputs to the quantitative data window 14, the physician can interactively view and analyze the several images acquired from a patient acquired in several medical exams over an extended period of time. This advantageously allows a physician to not only detect abnormalities and pathologies but also assess the effectiveness of treatment of the abnormalities and pathologies.
Referring now to
Additional functionality of the interactive data analysis and management tool 10 is illustrated in
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The image data is then analyzed at 102 to determine quantitative data corresponding to the images. Exams may be analyzed independently or in the context of other exams, e.g., auto-segmentation of PET data from a CT scan. The analysis may be performed manually, semi-automatically, or fully automatically. It is during this analysis stage that lesions are identified in the various images, either automatically or manually.
The analyzed data is then fused together at 104. For example, in a PET/CT scan, two exams are registered. For a given organ, both anatomical and functional information are displayed together. This includes showing a fused image and reporting information corresponding thereto. In another example, two chest x-rays exams taken at different times are registered. For a given nodule, an image may be displayed that shows the differences in nodule size between the two exams. In a neurology example, images from two MR exams taken at different times on a patient stricken with Alzheimer's disease may be fused together with disease progression over time shown in the registered image. In this regard, analysis may be in the form of images, fused images or measurements (depicted graphically or in text). The analytical results may be acquired from images of a single exam, multiple exams, or a combination of exams.
After the quantitative analysis has been derived, the windows of interactive data analysis tool described above are populated 106 to allow a physician to interactively review and assess the medical exams of the patient. As described above, the interactive tool, which may be graphically and/or textually displayed, enables a physician to effectively and efficiently assess a given abnormality or pathology and determine the effectiveness of treatment. As shown above, the quantitative data and corresponding images are displayed in an interactive and organized format and alleviates the need to discern multiple image documents and patient charts simultaneously.
As described above, through textual and graphical displays, analysis of data can be displayed at 108 in both an informative and comparative manner. Thus, the physician can navigate interactively with images and data derived from those images acquired of the patient over an extended period of time. Moreover, as shown in
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A similar comparative analysis is shown in
Referring now to
Additionally, it is contemplated that a dedicated workstation having a computer, monitor(s), and operably connected to the one or more databases may be used such that a physician may analyze the image and quantitative data remote from the scanner. As such, it is understood that the interactive image and quantitative data analysis tool described herein may be used remotely from the treatment facility at which the patient was scanned.
The present invention has been described with respect to a computer aided tool to facilitate efficient and effective diagnosis and assessment of abnormalities, pathologies, tumors, and the like of a medical patient based on image and quantitative data acquired with one or more medical scanners. The analysis tool not only facilitates the calculation and display of quantitative data and medical images, but also provides a comparative analysis of quantitative data and image data acquired in different scans over different periods of time. It is contemplated that images and quantitative data may be acquired with scanners of various modalities including, but not limited to, computed tomography (CT), magnetic resonance (MR), positron emission tomography (PET), ultrasound, x-ray, and nuclear medicine imaging. Moreover, the scanners used for image and quantitative data acquisition may be located at a common treatment center, such as a hospital or imaging center, or remotely located from one another. In this regard, a networked environment of scanners, image archival systems, and databases is contemplated and used to facilitate remote acquisition and storage of acquired image and quantitative data. The invention however is also applicable to stand-alone scanners such as hybrid scanners capable of acquiring image and quantitative data according to the principles of two different imaging modalities, such as hybrid PET/CT scanners. In a preferred embodiment, anatomical information and functional information is acquired with a CT scanner and a PET scanner, respectively.
The invention has been described with respect to an oncology environment wherein a PET scanner is used to acquire functional images and a CT scanner is used to acquire anatomical images to identify, evaluate, and assess treatment of cancerous lesions; however, the invention is not so limited. That is, a skilled artisan will appreciate that the present invention is applicable to other physiological studies including, but not limited to, cardiac disease and dementia, such as diagnosis, assessment, and treatment of Alzheimer's disease.
Additionally, the invention has been described with respect to an interactive tool and process, but it is understood that the invention may be embodied in a computer readable and executable code/language that is uploadable/downloadable to scanner or other workstation for implementation.
The present invention has been described in terms of the preferred embodiment, and it is recognized that equivalents, alternatives, and modifications, aside from those expressly stated, are possible and within the scope of the appending claims.
The present invention claims the benefit of U.S. Patent Application Ser. No. 60/739,561, filed Nov. 23, 2005.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60739561 | Nov 2005 | US |