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  4. Bone-marrow densitometry: Assessment of marrow space of human vertebrae by single energy high resolution-quantitative computed tomography
 
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Bone-marrow densitometry: Assessment of marrow space of human vertebrae by single energy high resolution-quantitative computed tomography

Publikationstyp
Journal Article
Date Issued
2016-07-01
Author(s)
Peña, Jaime Andrés  
Thomsen, Felix Sebastian Leo  
Damm, Timo  
Campbell, Graeme Michael  
Bastgen, Jan  
Barkmann, Reinhard  
Glüer, Claus Christian  
Institut
Biomechanik M-3  
TORE-URI
http://hdl.handle.net/11420/6008
Journal
Medical physics  
Volume
43
Issue
7
Start Page
4174
End Page
4183
Citation
Medical Physics 7 (43): 4174-4183 (2016-07-01)
Publisher DOI
10.1118/1.4950874
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-84975090416
Purpose: Accurate noninvasive assessment of vertebral bone marrow fat fraction is important for diagnostic assessment of a variety of disorders and therapies known to affect marrow composition. Moreover, it provides a means to correct fat-induced bias of single energy quantitative computed tomography (QCT) based bone mineral density (BMD) measurements. The authors developed new segmentation and calibration methods to obtain quantitative surrogate measures of marrow-fat density in the axial skeleton.

Methods: The authors developed and tested two high resolution-QCT (HR-QCT) based methods which permit segmentation of bone voids in between trabeculae hypothesizing that they are representative of bone marrow space. The methods permit calculation of marrow content in units of mineral equivalent marrow density (MeMD). The first method is based on global thresholding and peeling (GTP) to define a volume of interest away from the transition between trabecular bone and marrow. The second method, morphological filtering (MF), uses spherical elements of different radii (0.11.2 mm) and automatically places them in between trabeculae to identify regions with large trabecular interspace, the bone-void space. To determine their performance, data were compared ex vivo to high-resolution peripheral CT (HR-pQCT) images as the gold-standard. The performance of the methods was tested on a set of excised human vertebrae with intact bone marrow tissue representative of an elderly population with low BMD.

Results: 86% (GTP) and 87% (MF) of the voxels identified as true marrow space on HR-pQCT images were correctly identified on HR-QCT images and thus these volumes of interest can be considered to be representative of true marrow space. Within this volume, MeMD was estimated with residual errors of 4.8 mg/cm3 corresponding to accuracy errors in fat fraction on the order of 5% both for GTP and MF methods.

Conclusions: The GTP and MF methods on HR-QCT images permit noninvasive localization and densitometric assessment of marrow fat with residual accuracy errors sufficient to study disorders and therapies known to affect bone marrow composition. Additionally, the methods can be used to correct BMD for fat induced bias. Application and testing in vivo and in longitudinal studies are warranted to determine the clinical performance and value of these methods.
Subjects
bone densitometry
bone marrow
computed tomography
image analysis
marrow fat
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