Purpose
Image‐guided spine surgery increasingly relies on diagnostic MRI for device navigation, as it allows to visualize the nerves and soft tissues during screw insertion in the pedicle region, which is not possible with preoperative CT or cone beam CT. However, registration of MRI to C‐arm images remains difficult due to differences in visible tissue.
Methods
In this paper, we introduce a three‐dimensional/two‐dimensional (3D/2D) registration method of preoperative T2‐weighted MRI of the lumbar spine to C‐arm X‐ray using synthetic CT images. The registration work is based on a pseudo‐3D CycleGAN integrating a new cyclic loss function to ensure consistency in MRI and CT synthesis using differentiable histograms to match the multimodal distributions. The unified framework allows to improve bony tissue inference as opposed to regular 2D CycleGAN for image synthesis. A multiplanar digitally reconstructed radiograph (DRR) registration approach aligns the 3D and 2D images.
Results
Experiments performed on a public dataset of 18 pathological spines yielded a mean dice coefficient of 0.84 ± 0.015 on synthetic CTs. The DRR registration experiments, on the other hand, presented a target localization error of 2.1 ± 0.2mm.
Conclusion
Intensity distributions and voxel‐wise errors in Hounsfield units show encouraging results, illustrating the network's flexibility of producing qualitatively and quantitatively reasonable synthetic CT scans that can be used in a surgical 3D/2D registration framework. These promising results demonstrate the potential of the synthesis tool prior to integration in an image‐guidance system.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.