Development of an ultrafast brain MR neuronavigation protocol for ventricular shunt placement

Author:

Vanstrum Erik B.1,Borzage Matthew T.2,Ha Joseph3,Chu Jason3,Upreti Meenakshi4,Moats Rex A.4,Lai Lillian M.5,Chiarelli Peter A.13

Affiliation:

1. Keck School of Medicine of USC, Los Angeles, California;

2. Fetal and Neonatal Institute, Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California;

3. Division of Neurosurgery, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California; and

4. The Saban Research Institute, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California

5. Department of Radiology, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Los Angeles, California;

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Advancements in MRI technology have provided improved ways to acquire imaging data and to more seamlessly incorporate MRI into modern pediatric surgical practice. One such situation is image-guided navigation for pediatric neurosurgical procedures, including intracranial catheter placement. Image-guided surgery (IGS) requires acquisition of CT or MR images, but the former carries the risk of ionizing radiation and the latter is associated with long scan times and often requires pediatric patients to be sedated. The objective of this project was to circumvent the use of CT and standard-sequence MRI in ventricular neuronavigation by investigating the use of fast MR sequences on the basis of 3 criteria: scan duration comparable to that of CT acquisition, visualization of ventricular morphology, and image registration with surface renderings comparable to standard of care. The aim of this work was to report image development, implementation, and results of registration accuracy testing in healthy subjects. METHODS The authors formulated 11 candidate MR sequences on the basis of the standard IGS protocol, and various scan parameters were modified, such as k-space readout direction, partial k-space acquisition, sparse sampling of k-space (i.e., compressed sensing), in-plane spatial resolution, and slice thickness. To evaluate registration accuracy, the authors calculated target registration error (TRE). A candidate sequence was selected for further evaluation in 10 healthy subjects. RESULTS The authors identified a candidate imaging protocol, termed presurgical imaging with compressed sensing for time optimization (PICO). Acquisition of the PICO protocol takes 25 seconds. The authors demonstrated noninferior TRE for PICO (3.00 ± 0.19 mm) in comparison with the default MRI neuronavigation protocol (3.35 ± 0.20 mm, p = 0.20). CONCLUSIONS The developed and tested sequence of this work allowed accurate intraoperative image registration and provided sufficient parenchymal contrast for visualization of ventricular anatomy. Further investigations will evaluate use of the PICO protocol as a substitute for CT and conventional MRI protocols in ventricular neuronavigation.

Publisher

Journal of Neurosurgery Publishing Group (JNSPG)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology

Reference12 articles.

1. Electromagnetic-guided neuronavigation for safe placement of intraventricular catheters in pediatric neurosurgery;Hermann EJ,2012

2. Image-guided cerebrospinal fluid shunting in children: catheter accuracy and shunt survival;Levitt MR,2012

3. Ventricular catheter placement accuracy in non-stereotactic shunt surgery for hydrocephalus;Lind CRP,2009

4. External ventricular drain insertion accuracy: is there a need for change in practice?;Toma AK,2009

5. Comparison of the accuracy of ventricular catheter placement using freehand placement, ultrasonic guidance, and stereotactic neuronavigation;Wilson TJ,2013

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