Reattachable fiducial skin marker for automatic multimodality registration

Author:

Mittmann Benjamin J.ORCID,Seitel Alexander,Echner Gernot,Johnen Wiebke,Gnirs Regula,Maier-Hein Lena,Franz Alfred M.

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Fusing image information has become increasingly important for optimal diagnosis and treatment of the patient. Despite intensive research towards markerless registration approaches, fiducial marker-based methods remain the default choice for a wide range of applications in clinical practice. However, as especially non-invasive markers cannot be positioned reproducibly in the same pose on the patient, pre-interventional imaging has to be performed immediately before the intervention for fiducial marker-based registrations. Methods We propose a new non-invasive, reattachable fiducial skin marker concept for multi-modal registration approaches including the use of electromagnetic or optical tracking technologies. We furthermore describe a robust, automatic fiducial marker localization algorithm for computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) images. Localization of the new fiducial marker has been assessed for different marker configurations using both CT and MRI. Furthermore, we applied the marker in an abdominal phantom study. For this, we attached the marker at three poses to the phantom, registered ten segmented targets of the phantom’s CT image to live ultrasound images and determined the target registration error (TRE) for each target and each marker pose. Results Reattachment of the marker was possible with a mean precision of 0.02 mm ± 0.01 mm. Our algorithm successfully localized the marker automatically in all ($$n=201$$ n = 201 ) evaluated CT/MRI images. Depending on the marker pose, the mean ($$n=10$$ n = 10 ) TRE of the abdominal phantom study ranged from 1.51 ± 0.75 mm to 4.65 ± 1.22 mm. Conclusions The non-invasive, reattachable skin marker concept allows reproducible positioning of the marker and automatic localization in different imaging modalities. The low TREs indicate the potential applicability of the marker concept for clinical interventions, such as the puncture of abdominal lesions, where current image-based registration approaches still lack robustness and existing marker-based methods are often impractical.

Funder

Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt

Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und Energie

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Health Informatics,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging,General Medicine,Surgery,Computer Graphics and Computer-Aided Design,Computer Science Applications,Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition,Biomedical Engineering

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