An improved optical flow tracking technique for real-time MR-guided beam therapies in moving organs

C. Zachiu, N. Papadakis, M. Ries, C. Moonen, B. Denis De Senneville

Onderzoeksoutput: Bijdrage aan tijdschriftArtikelpeer review

76 Citaten (Scopus)

Samenvatting

Magnetic resonance (MR) guided high intensity focused ultrasound and external beam radiotherapy interventions, which we shall refer to as beam therapies/interventions, are promising techniques for the non-invasive ablation of tumours in abdominal organs. However, therapeutic energy delivery in these areas becomes challenging due to the continuous displacement of the organs with respiration. Previous studies have addressed this problem by coupling high-framerate MR-imaging with a tracking technique based on the algorithm proposed by Horn and Schunck (H and S), which was chosen due to its fast convergence rate and highly parallelisable numerical scheme. Such characteristics were shown to be indispensable for the real-time guidance of beam therapies. In its original form, however, the algorithm is sensitive to local grey-level intensity variations not attributed to motion such as those that occur, for example, in the proximity of pulsating arteries. In this study, an improved motion estimation strategy which reduces the impact of such effects is proposed. Displacements are estimated through the minimisation of a variation of the H and S functional for which the quadratic data fidelity term was replaced with a term based on the linear L1norm, resulting in what we have called an L2-L1 functional. The proposed method was tested in the livers and kidneys of two healthy volunteers under free-breathing conditions, on a data set comprising 3000 images equally divided between the volunteers. The results show that, compared to the existing approaches, our method demonstrates a greater robustness to local grey-level intensity variations introduced by arterial pulsations. Additionally, the computational time required by our implementation make it compatible with the work-flow of real-time MR-guided beam interventions. To the best of our knowledge this study was the first to analyse the behaviour of an L1-based optical flow functional in an applicative context: real-time MR-guidance of beam therapies in moving organs.

Originele taal-2Engels
Pagina's (van-tot)9003-9029
Aantal pagina's27
TijdschriftPhysics in Medicine and Biology
Volume60
Nummer van het tijdschrift23
DOI's
StatusGepubliceerd - 5 nov. 2015
Extern gepubliceerdJa

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