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Applying spatial–temporal image correlation to the fetal kidney: Repeatability of 3D segmentation and volumetric impedance indices
Author(s) -
Gu Bonita,
Stevenson Gordon N.,
Ferreira Ana,
Pathirana Sudeshni,
Sanderson Jennifer,
Henry Amanda,
Alphonse Jennifer,
Welsh Alec W.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
australasian journal of ultrasound in medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2205-0140
pISSN - 1836-6864
DOI - 10.1002/ajum.12094
Subject(s) - repeatability , medicine , intraclass correlation , reproducibility , nuclear medicine , coefficient of variation , correlation coefficient , mathematics , statistics
Spatiotemporal image correlation ( STIC ) can evaluate fetal renal impedance using four‐dimensional volumetric indices. We assessed repeatability of three‐dimensional kidney segmentation and the repeatability of the resultant indices. Methods In each of 57 healthy pregnant women, three renal artery pulsed‐wave Doppler ( PWD ) traces and three STIC volumes were acquired from the same fetal kidney and segmented by two observers. Vascularisation‐flow index ( VFI ) and fractional moving blood volume ( FMBV ) were calculated for every STIC frame and used to determine the volumetric pulsatility index ( vPI ), volumetric resistance index ( vRI ) and volumetric systolic/diastolic ratio ( vS /D). Segmentation performance was assessed using Dice similarity coefficients ( DSC s), Hausdorff distances, coefficient of variation (CoV) and the intraclass correlation coefficient ( ICC ). Intra/Inter volumetric index repeatability was assessed using ICCs. Results Forty‐eight cases (84%) provided full data. Mean intra‐ and interobserver DSC s were 0.90 and 0.81. Mean intra‐ and interobserver Hausdorff distances were 3.88 mm and 5.27 mm. Average kidney volumes for observers 1 and 2 were 9.88 mL and 8.54 mL (mean difference 16.1%). Mean intra‐observer volumetric CoVs were 5.3% and 8.1%. Intra‐ and interobserver ICC s for kidney volume (same STIC volume) were 0.97 and 0.85. When assessing volume variation between STIC volumes, intra‐observer ICC was 0.97. ICC s were 0.77–0.81 for VFI ‐derived volumetric indices and 0.61–0.62 for FMBV ‐derived indices; ICC s for all PWD indices were between 0.58 and 0.59. Conclusions Periodical variation in vascularity was demonstrated in the fetal kidney, and three‐dimensional segmentation was highly repeatable. Derived volumetric impedance indices show moderate variability but outperform corresponding two‐dimensional PWD indices in terms of reproducibility.