A subscription to JoVE is required to view this content. Sign in or start your free trial.
The aim of this protocol is to provide a time efficient way to segment volumes of interest on high-resolution CT scans to use for further radiomics analysis.
Segmentation is a complex task, faced by radiologists and researchers as radiomics and machine learning grow in potentiality. The process can either be automatic, semi-automatic, or manual, the first often not being sufficiently precise or easily reproducible, and the last being excessively time consuming when involving large districts with high-resolution acquisitions.
A high-resolution CT of the chest is composed of hundreds of images, and this makes the manual approach excessively time consuming. Furthermore, the parenchymal alterations require an expert evaluation to be discerned from the normal appearance; thus, a semi-automatic approach to the segmentation process is, to the best of our knowledge, the most suitable when segmenting pneumonias, especially when their features are still unknown.
For the studies conducted in our institute on the imaging of COVID-19, we adopted 3D Slicer, a freeware software produced by the Harvard University, and combined the threshold with the paint brush instruments to achieve fast and precise segmentation of aerated lung, ground glass opacities, and consolidations. When facing complex cases, this method still requires a considerable amount of time for proper manual adjustments, but provides an extremely efficient mean to define segments to use for further analysis, such as the calculation of the percentage of the affected lung parenchyma or texture analysis of the ground glass areas.
In the current year, the world is facing a health emergency, the pandemic caused by the novel Coronavirus, Sars-CoV2. Even if, up to the present date, many aspects regarding the physiopathology of the COVID-19 infection are still unclear, it shares several characteristics with its “ancestors” SARS1 and MERS. In particular, it has been proven that the virion spike proteins interact with the Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Type-2, a receptor well represented on the alveolar endothelial cells, but ubiquitous in the human organism, thus having the potentiality to give systemic symptoms1.
For diagnosis, the curr....
This protocol follows the guidelines of the institutional human research ethics committee.
1. Downloading the DICOM images
2. Importing the HRCT study on the 3D Slicer software
The proposed method has been refined through trials and errors, testing it on 117 patients affected by COVID-19 pneumonia with a positive rt-PCR test.
After a short learning curve, the time needed to obtain the segments can vary from 5 to 15 minutes, depending on the presentation pattern.
As shown on Figure 1, the method yields precise segments: this can be observed by noticing the exact correspondence with the HRCT. The 3D rendering helps to assess.......
Segmentation represents a fundamental step for performing modern quantitative radiology studies, and is necessary to apply radiomics or texture analysis techniques. Pathological findings in the lungs represent one of the most challenging to segment, for the lack of defined anatomical borders and a small difference in attenuation value when compared to the healthy areas.
The source images must present with a minimum of artifacts if possible, especially on the pathological areas, and this is som.......
This work was supported by funding from the Department of Radiology of the University of Bologna.
....Name | Company | Catalog Number | Comments |
CT Scanner | General Electrics Healthcare | 64-MDCT VCT lightSpeed | The CT scanner used for HRCT acquisitions |
Desktop Computer | ThinkCentre | The computer used to download the DICOM files and run 3D Slicer |
This article has been published
Video Coming Soon
ABOUT JoVE
Copyright © 2024 MyJoVE Corporation. All rights reserved