A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness

Purpose: To retrospectively evaluate the accuracy of a novel software platform for assessing completeness of percutaneous thermal ablations. Materials & methods: Ninety hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) in 50 patients receiving percutaneous ultrasound-guided microwave ablation (MWA) that resulted...

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Main Authors: Marco Solbiati, Riccardo Muglia, S. Nahum Goldberg, Tiziana Ierace, Alessandro Rotilio, Katia M Passera, Ilaria Marre, Luigi Solbiati
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2019-01-01
Series:International Journal of Hyperthermia
Subjects:
ct
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2019.1569267
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spelling doaj-5acb11271d074347b91981677ab37f472020-11-24T21:25:09ZengTaylor & Francis GroupInternational Journal of Hyperthermia0265-67361464-51572019-01-0136133634210.1080/02656736.2019.15692671569267A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completenessMarco Solbiati0Riccardo Muglia1S. Nahum Goldberg2Tiziana Ierace3Alessandro Rotilio4Katia M Passera5Ilaria Marre6Luigi Solbiati7R.A.W. SrlHumanitas UniversityHadassah Hebrew University Medical CentreHumanitas Clinical and Research CenterR.A.W. SrlR.A.W. SrlR.A.W. SrlHumanitas UniversityPurpose: To retrospectively evaluate the accuracy of a novel software platform for assessing completeness of percutaneous thermal ablations. Materials & methods: Ninety hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) in 50 patients receiving percutaneous ultrasound-guided microwave ablation (MWA) that resulted in apparent technical success at 24-h post-ablation computed tomography (CT) and with ≥1-year imaging follow-up were randomly selected from a 320 HCC ablation database (2010–2016). Using a novel volumetric registration software, pre-ablation CT volumes of the HCCs without and with the addition of a 5 mm safety margin, and corresponding post-ablation necrosis volumes were segmented, co-registered and overlapped. These were compared to visual side-by-side inspection of axial images. Results: At 1-year follow-up, CT showed absence of local tumor progression (LTP) in 69/90 (76.7%) cases and LTP in 21/90 (23.3%). For HCCs classified by the software as “incomplete tumor treatments”, LTP developed in 13/17 (76.5%) and all 13 (100%) of these LTPs occurred exactly where residual non-ablated tumor was identified by retrospective software analysis. HCCs classified as “complete ablation with <100% 5 mm ablative margins” had LTP in 8/49 (16.3%), while none of 24 HCCs with “complete ablation including 100% 5 mm ablative margins” had LTP. Differences in LTP between both partially ablated HCCs vs completely ablated HCCs, and ablated HCCs with <100% vs with 100% 5 mm margins were statistically significant (p < .0001 and p = .036, respectively). Thus, 13/21 (61.9%) incomplete tumor treatments could have been detected immediately, were the software available at the time of ablation. Conclusions: A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness may increase the detection of incompletely ablated tumors, thereby holding the potential to avoid subsequent recurrences.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2019.1569267ct3d renderingsoftwareimage processingablation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marco Solbiati
Riccardo Muglia
S. Nahum Goldberg
Tiziana Ierace
Alessandro Rotilio
Katia M Passera
Ilaria Marre
Luigi Solbiati
spellingShingle Marco Solbiati
Riccardo Muglia
S. Nahum Goldberg
Tiziana Ierace
Alessandro Rotilio
Katia M Passera
Ilaria Marre
Luigi Solbiati
A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness
International Journal of Hyperthermia
ct
3d rendering
software
image processing
ablation
author_facet Marco Solbiati
Riccardo Muglia
S. Nahum Goldberg
Tiziana Ierace
Alessandro Rotilio
Katia M Passera
Ilaria Marre
Luigi Solbiati
author_sort Marco Solbiati
title A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness
title_short A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness
title_full A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness
title_fullStr A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness
title_full_unstemmed A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness
title_sort novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series International Journal of Hyperthermia
issn 0265-6736
1464-5157
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Purpose: To retrospectively evaluate the accuracy of a novel software platform for assessing completeness of percutaneous thermal ablations. Materials & methods: Ninety hepatocellular carcinomas (HCCs) in 50 patients receiving percutaneous ultrasound-guided microwave ablation (MWA) that resulted in apparent technical success at 24-h post-ablation computed tomography (CT) and with ≥1-year imaging follow-up were randomly selected from a 320 HCC ablation database (2010–2016). Using a novel volumetric registration software, pre-ablation CT volumes of the HCCs without and with the addition of a 5 mm safety margin, and corresponding post-ablation necrosis volumes were segmented, co-registered and overlapped. These were compared to visual side-by-side inspection of axial images. Results: At 1-year follow-up, CT showed absence of local tumor progression (LTP) in 69/90 (76.7%) cases and LTP in 21/90 (23.3%). For HCCs classified by the software as “incomplete tumor treatments”, LTP developed in 13/17 (76.5%) and all 13 (100%) of these LTPs occurred exactly where residual non-ablated tumor was identified by retrospective software analysis. HCCs classified as “complete ablation with <100% 5 mm ablative margins” had LTP in 8/49 (16.3%), while none of 24 HCCs with “complete ablation including 100% 5 mm ablative margins” had LTP. Differences in LTP between both partially ablated HCCs vs completely ablated HCCs, and ablated HCCs with <100% vs with 100% 5 mm margins were statistically significant (p < .0001 and p = .036, respectively). Thus, 13/21 (61.9%) incomplete tumor treatments could have been detected immediately, were the software available at the time of ablation. Conclusions: A novel software platform for volumetric assessment of ablation completeness may increase the detection of incompletely ablated tumors, thereby holding the potential to avoid subsequent recurrences.
topic ct
3d rendering
software
image processing
ablation
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02656736.2019.1569267
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