Opportunistic screening is a new promising technique to identify individuals at high risk for osteoporotic fracture using computed tomography (CT) scans originally acquired for an clinical purpose unrelated to osteoporosis. In these CT scans, a calibration phantom traditionally required to convert measured CT values to bone mineral density (BMD) is missing. As an alternative, phantomless calibration has been developed. This study aimed to review the principles of four existing phantomless calibration methods and to compare their performance against the gold standard of simultaneous calibration (ΔBMD). All methods were applied to a dataset of 350 females scanned with a highly standardized CT protocol (DS1) and to a second dataset of 114 patients (38 female) from clinical routine covering a large range of CT acquisition and reconstruction parameters (DS2). Three of the phantomless calibration methods must be precalibrated with a reference dataset containing a calibration phantom. Sixty scans from DS1 and 57 from DS2 were randomly selected for this precalibration. For each phantomless calibration method first the best combination of internal reference materials (IMs) was selected. These were either air and blood or subcutaneous adipose tissue, blood, and cortical bone. In addition, for phantomless calibration a fifth method based on average calibration parameters derived from the reference dataset was applied. For DS1, ΔBMD results (mean standard deviation) for the phantomless calibration methods requiring a precalibration ranged from 0.1 2.7 mg/cm to 2.4 3.5 mg/cm with similar means but significantly higher standard deviations for DS2. Performance of the phantomless calibration method, which does not require a precalibration was worse (ΔBMD DS1: 12.6 13.2 mg/cm , DS2: 0.5 8.8 mg/cm ). In conclusion, phantomless BMD calibration performs well if precalibrated with a reference dataset. © 2023 The Authors. Journal of Bone and Mineral Research published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of American Society for Bone and Mineral Research (ASBMR).
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JBMR Plus
October 2024
Injury Biomechanics Research Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio 43210, United States.
Volumetric bone mineral density (vBMD) is commonly assessed using QCT. Although standard vBMD calculation methods require phantom rods that may not be available, internal-reference phantomless (IPL) and direct measurements of Hounsfield units (HU) can be used to calculate vBMD in their absence. Yet, neither approach has been systemically assessed across skeletal sites, and HU need further validation as a vBMD proxy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Appl Clin Med Phys
October 2024
Institute of Radiation Physics, Lausanne University Hospital and Lausanne University, Lausanne, Switzerland.
Background: Treatment delivery safety and accuracy are essential to control the disease and protect healthy tissues in radiation therapy. For usual treatment, a phantom-based patient specific quality assurance (PSQA) is performed to verify the delivery prior to the treatment. The emergence of adaptive radiation therapy (ART) adds new complexities to PSQA.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Bone Miner Res
July 2024
Department of Medicine 3, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nürnberg and Universitätsklinikum Erlangen, 91054 Erlangen, Germany.
Spine (Phila Pa 1976)
June 2024
Norton Leatherman Spine Center, 210 E Gray St, Suite 900, 40202, Louisville, KY, USA.
Study Design: Diagnostic accuracy study.
Objective: To establish a simple method of phantomless bone mineral density (BMD) measurement by using preoperative lumbar Computed Tomography (CT) scans, and compare the accuracy of reference tissue combinations to diagnose low BMD against uncalibrated Hounsfield units (HUs).
Summary Of Background Data: HUs are used as a measure of BMD; however, associations between HU and T-scores vary widely.
PLoS One
June 2024
Medical Technology Lab, IRCCS Istituto Ortopedico Rizzoli, Bologna, Italy.
Finite element models built from quantitative computed tomography images rely on element-wise mapping of material properties starting from Hounsfield Units (HU), which can be converted into mineral densities upon calibration. While calibration is preferably carried out by scanning a phantom with known-density components, conducting phantom-based calibration may not always be possible. In such cases, a phantomless procedure, where the scanned subject's tissues are used as a phantom, is an interesting alternative.
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