Rapid automated lumen segmentation of coronary optical coherence tomography images followed by 3D reconstruction of coronary arteries

J Med Imaging (Bellingham). 2024 Jan;11(1):014004. doi: 10.1117/1.JMI.11.1.014004. Epub 2024 Jan 2.

Abstract

Purpose: Optical coherence tomography has emerged as an important intracoronary imaging technique for coronary artery disease diagnosis as it produces high-resolution cross-sectional images of luminal and plaque morphology. Precise and fast lumen segmentation is essential for efficient OCT morphometric analysis. However, due to the presence of various image artifacts, including side branches, luminal blood artifacts, and complicated lesions, this remains a challenging task.

Approach: Our research study proposes a rapid automatic segmentation method that utilizes nonuniform rational B-spline to connect limited pixel points and identify the edges of the OCT lumen. The proposed method suppresses image noise and accurately extracts the lumen border with a high correlation to ground truth images based on the area, minimal diameter, and maximal diameter.

Results: We evaluated the method using 3300 OCT frames from 10 patients and found that it achieved favorable results. The average time taken for automatic segmentation by the proposed method is 0.17 s per frame. Additionally, the proposed method includes seamless vessel reconstruction following the lumen segmentation.

Conclusions: The developed automated system provides an accurate, efficient, robust, and user-friendly platform for coronary lumen segmentation and reconstruction, which can pave the way for improved assessment of the coronary artery lumen morphology.

Keywords: image segmentation; nonuniform rational B-spline; optical coherence tomography; three-dimensional reconstruction.