A framework to measure myocardial extracellular volume fraction using dual-phase low dose CT images

Yixun Liu, Songtao Liu, Marcelo S. Nacif, Christopher T. Sibley, David A. Bluemke, Ronald M. Summers, Jianhua Yao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Purpose: Myocardial extracellular volume fraction (ECVF) is a surrogate imaging biomarker of diffuse myocardial fibrosis, a hallmark of pathologic ventricular remodeling. Low dose cardiac CT is emerging as a promising modality to detect diffuse interstitial myocardial fibrosis due to its fast acquisition and low radiation; however, the insufficient contrast in the low dose CT images poses great challenge to measure ECVF from the image. Methods: To deal with this difficulty, the authors present a complete ECVF measurement framework including a point-guided myocardial modeling, a deformable model-based myocardium segmentation, nonrigid registration of pre- and post-CT, and ECVF calculation. Results: The proposed method was evaluated on 20 patients by two observers. Compared to the manually delineated reference segmentations, the accuracy of our segmentation in terms of true positive volume fraction (TPVF), false positive volume fraction (FPVF), and average surface distance (ASD), were 92.18% ± 3.52%, 0.31% ± 0.10%, 0.69 ± 0.14 mm, respectively. The interobserver variability measured by concordance correlation coefficient regarding TPVF, FPVF, and ASD were 0.95, 0.90, 0.94, respectively, demonstrating excellent agreement. Bland-Altman method showed 95% limits of agreement between ECVF at CT and ECVF at MR. Conclusions: The proposed framework demonstrates its efficiency, accuracy, and noninvasiveness in ECVF measurement and dramatically advances the ECVF at cardiac CT toward its clinical use.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article number103501
JournalMedical Physics
Volume40
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cardiac CT
  • Deformable model
  • Extracellular volume fraction
  • Low dose
  • Modeling

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biophysics
  • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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