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Published in: European Radiology 10/2017

01-10-2017 | Computer Applications

Co-registration of pre-operative CT with ex vivo surgically excised ground glass nodules to define spatial extent of invasive adenocarcinoma on in vivo imaging: a proof-of-concept study

Authors: Mirabela Rusu, Prabhakar Rajiah, Robert Gilkeson, Michael Yang, Christopher Donatelli, Rajat Thawani, Frank J. Jacono, Philip Linden, Anant Madabhushi

Published in: European Radiology | Issue 10/2017

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Abstract

Objective

To develop an approach for radiology-pathology fusion of ex vivo histology of surgically excised pulmonary nodules with pre-operative CT, to radiologically map spatial extent of the invasive adenocarcinomatous component of the nodule.

Methods

Six subjects (age: 75 ± 11 years) with pre-operative CT and surgically excised ground-glass nodules (size: 22.5 ± 5.1 mm) with a significant invasive adenocarcinomatous component (>5 mm) were included. The pathologist outlined disease extent on digitized histology specimens; two radiologists and a pulmonary critical care physician delineated the entire nodule on CT (in-plane resolution: <0.8 mm, inter-slice distance: 1–5 mm). We introduced a novel reconstruction approach to localize histology slices in 3D relative to each other while using CT scan as spatial constraint. This enabled the spatial mapping of the extent of tumour invasion from histology onto CT.

Results

Good overlap of the 3D reconstructed histology and the nodule outlined on CT was observed (65.9 ± 5.2%). Reduction in 3D misalignment of corresponding anatomical landmarks on histology and CT was observed (1.97 ± 0.42 mm). Moreover, the CT attenuation (HU) distributions were different when comparing invasive and in situ regions.

Conclusion

This proof-of-concept study suggests that our fusion method can enable the spatial mapping of the invasive adenocarcinomatous component from 2D histology slices onto in vivo CT.

Key Points

3D reconstructions are generated from 2D histology specimens of ground glass nodules.
The reconstruction methodology used pre-operative in vivo CT as 3D spatial constraint.
The methodology maps adenocarcinoma extent from digitized histology onto in vivo CT.
The methodology potentially facilitates the discovery of CT signature of invasive adenocarcinoma.
Appendix
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Metadata
Title
Co-registration of pre-operative CT with ex vivo surgically excised ground glass nodules to define spatial extent of invasive adenocarcinoma on in vivo imaging: a proof-of-concept study
Authors
Mirabela Rusu
Prabhakar Rajiah
Robert Gilkeson
Michael Yang
Christopher Donatelli
Rajat Thawani
Frank J. Jacono
Philip Linden
Anant Madabhushi
Publication date
01-10-2017
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Published in
European Radiology / Issue 10/2017
Print ISSN: 0938-7994
Electronic ISSN: 1432-1084
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-017-4813-0

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