• Informatics in Radiology: Electronic Cleansing for Non-cathartic CT Colonography: A Structure-Analysis Scheme

    RadioGraphics 2010; 30:585-602

     

    Informatics in Radiology: Electronic Cleansing for Non-cathartic CT Colonography: A Structure-Analysis Scheme


    Wenli Cai, PhD ,Hiroyuki Yoshida, PhD ,Michael E. Zalis, MD ,Janne Johannes Nappi, PhD, Gordon J. Harris, PhD Computed tomographic (CT) colonography performed after tagging of fecal matter but without a cathartic agent, or noncathartic CT colonog­raphy (also known as laxative-free CT colonography) , is regarded as a promising next-generation technique for reducing or eliminating the discomfort associated with cathartic bowel preparation, which is the major barrier to undergoing colon cancer screening. Electronic cleans­ing is an emerging technique for the removal of tagged fecal materials from CT colonographic images. Three major electronic cleansing arti­facts—soft-tissue degradation, pseudo-soft-tissue structures, and incom­plete cleansing—severely impair the quality of electronically cleansed noncathartic CT colonographic images and limit the diagnostic utility of this modality. A structure-analysis electronic cleansing scheme was developed that makes use of local morphologic information to identify submerged colonic soft-tissue structures while removing the tagged ma­terial. Combined with other cutting-edge image processing techniques, including local roughness analysis, mosaic decomposition, and level set segmentation, structure-analysis cleansing helps eliminate the afore­mentioned artifacts, providing diagnostic-quality cleansed CT colono­graphic images for the detection of colon cancer. Noncathartic CT colonography with the application of structure-analysis cleansing is ex­pected to help promote CT colonography as a patient-friendly method of colorectal cancer screening.