Lung Respiratory Motion Estimation Based on Fast Kalman Filtering and 4D CT Image Registration

Respiratory motion estimation is an important part in image-guided radiation therapy and clinical diagnosis. However, most of the respiratory motion estimation methods rely on indirect measurements of external breathing indicators, which will not only introduce great estimation errors, but also brin...

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Veröffentlicht in:IEEE journal of biomedical and health informatics 2021-06, Vol.25 (6), p.2007-2017
Hauptverfasser: Xue, Peng, Fu, Yu, Ji, Huizhong, Cui, Wentao, Dong, Enqing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Respiratory motion estimation is an important part in image-guided radiation therapy and clinical diagnosis. However, most of the respiratory motion estimation methods rely on indirect measurements of external breathing indicators, which will not only introduce great estimation errors, but also bring invasive injury for patients. In this paper, we propose a method of lung respiratory motion estimation based on fast Kalman filtering and 4D CT image registration (LRME-4DCT). In order to perform dynamic motion estimation for continuous phases, a motion estimation model is constructed by combining two kinds of GPU-accelerated 4D CT image registration methods with fast Kalman filtering method. To address the high computational requirements of 4D CT image sequences, a multi-level processing strategy is adopted in the 4D CT image registration methods, and respiratory motion states are predicted from three independent directions. In the DIR-lab dataset and POPI dataset with 4D CT images, the average target registration error (TRE) of the LRME-4DCT method can reach 0.91 mm and 0.85 mm respectively. Compared with traditional estimation methods based on pair-wise image registration, the proposed LRME-4DCT method can estimate the physiological respiratory motion more accurately and quickly. Our proposed LRME-4DCT method fully meets the practical clinical requirements for rapid dynamic estimation of lung respiratory motion.
ISSN:2168-2194
2168-2208
DOI:10.1109/JBHI.2020.3030071