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Tomosynthesis‐based localization of radioactive seeds in prostate brachytherapy
Author(s) -
Tutar Ismail B.,
Managuli Ravi,
Shamdasani Vijay,
Cho Paul S.,
Pathak Sayan D.,
Kim Yongmin
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.1624755
Subject(s) - brachytherapy , prostate brachytherapy , imaging phantom , tomosynthesis , projection (relational algebra) , prostate , computer science , image quality , dosimetry , nuclear medicine , computer vision , medicine , artificial intelligence , medical physics , radiation therapy , radiology , mammography , algorithm , image (mathematics) , cancer , breast cancer
Accurately assessing the quality of prostate brachytherapy intraoperatively would be valuable for improved clinical outcome by ensuring the delivery of a prescribed tumoricidal radiation dose to the entire prostate gland. One necessary step towards this goal is the robust and rapid localization of implanted seeds. Several methods have been developed to locate seeds from x‐ray projection images, but they fail to detect completely‐overlapping seeds, thus necessitating manual intervention. To overcome this limitation, we have developed a new method where (1) a three‐dimensional volume is reconstructed from x‐ray projection images using a brachytherapy‐specific tomosynthesis reconstruction algorithm with built‐in blur compensation and (2) the seeds are located in this reconstructed volume. In contrast to other projection‐based methods, our method can detect completely overlapping seeds. Our simulation results indicate that we can locate all implanted seeds in the prostate using a tomosynthesis angle of 30° and seven projection images. The mean localization error is 1.27 mm for a case with 100 seeds. We have also tested our method using a prostate phantom with 61 implanted seeds and succeeded in locating all seeds automatically. We believe this new method can be useful for the intraoperative quality assessment of prostate brachytherapy in the future.

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