Abdominal motion tracking with free-breathing XD-GRASP acquisitions using spatio-temporal geodesic trajectories

Med Biol Eng Comput. 2022 Feb;60(2):583-598. doi: 10.1007/s11517-021-02477-w. Epub 2022 Jan 14.

Abstract

Free-breathing external beam radiotherapy remains challenging due to the complex elastic or irregular motion of abdominal organs, as imaging moving organs leads to the creation of motion blurring artifacts. In this paper, we propose a radial-based MRI reconstruction method from 3D free-breathing abdominal data using spatio-temporal geodesic trajectories, to quantify motion during radiotherapy. The prospective study was approved by the institutional review board and consent was obtained from all participants. A total of 25 healthy volunteers, 12 women and 13 men (38 years ± 12 [standard deviation]), and 11 liver cancer patients underwent imaging using a 3.0 T clinical MRI system. The radial acquisition based on golden-angle sparse sampling was performed using a 3D stack-of-stars gradient-echo sequence and reconstructed using a discretized piecewise spatio-temporal trajectory defined in a low-dimensional embedding, which tracks the inhale and exhale phases, allowing the separation between distinct motion phases. Liver displacement between phases as measured with the proposed radial approach based on the deformation vector fields was compared to a navigator-based approach. Images reconstructed with the proposed technique with 20 motion states and registered with the multiscale B-spline approach received on average the highest Likert scores for the overall image quality and visual SNR score 3.2 ± 0.3 (mean ± standard deviation), with liver displacement errors varying between 0.1 and 2.0 mm (mean 0.8 ± 0.6 mm). When compared to navigator-based approaches, the proposed method yields similar deformation vector field magnitudes and angle distributions, and with improved reconstruction accuracy based on mean squared errors. Schematic illustration of the proposed 4D-MRI reconstruction method based on radial golden-angle acquisitions and a respiration motion model from a manifold embedding used for motion tracking. First, data is extracted from the center of k-space using golden-angle sampling, which is then mapped onto a low-dimensional embedding, describing the relationship between neighboring samples in the breathing cycle. The trained model is then used to extract the respiratory motion signal for slice re-ordering. The process then improves the image quality through deformable image registration. Using a reference volume, the deformation vector field (DVF) of sequential motion states are extracted, followed by deformable registrations. The output is a 4DMRI which allows to visualize and quantify motion during free-breathing.

Keywords: 4D-MRI; Abdominal motion tracking; Deformable registration; Geodesic manifold trajectory; XD-GRASP.

MeSH terms

  • Artifacts
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Imaging, Three-Dimensional*
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Male
  • Motion
  • Prospective Studies
  • Respiration*