IEEE Open Journal of Engineering in Medicine and Biology (Jan 2024)

Computer-Aided Intra-Operatory Positioning of an MRgHIFU Applicator Dedicated to Abdominal Thermal Therapy Using Particle Swarm Optimization

  • Yacine M'Rad,
  • Caecilia Charbonnier,
  • Marcelo Elias de Oliveira,
  • Pauline Coralie Guillemin,
  • Lindsey Alexandra Crowe,
  • Thibaud Kossler,
  • Pierre-Alexandre Poletti,
  • Sana Boudabbous,
  • Alexis Ricoeur,
  • Rares Salomir,
  • Orane Lorton

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/OJEMB.2024.3410118
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
pp. 524 – 533

Abstract

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Purpose: Transducer positioning for liver ablation by magnetic resonance-guided high-intensity focused ultrasound (MRgHIFU) is challenging due to the presence of air-filled organs or bones on the beam path. This paper presents a software tool developed to optimize the positioning of a HIFU transducer dedicated to abdominal thermal therapy, to maximize the treatment's efficiency while minimizing the near-field risk. Methods: A software tool was developed to determine the theoretical optimal position (TOP) of the transducer based on the minimization of a cost function using the particle swarm optimization (PSO). After an initialization phase and a manual segmentation of the abdomen of 5 pigs, the program randomly generates particles with 2 degrees of freedom and iteratively minimizes the cost function of the particles considering 3 parameters weighted according to their criticality. New particles are generated around the best position obtained at the previous step and the process is repeated until the optimal position of the transducer is reached. MR imaging data from in vivo HIFU ablation in pig livers was used for ground truth comparison between the TOP and the experimental position (EP). Results: As compared to the manual EP, the rotation difference with the TOP was on average −3.1 ± 7.1° and the distance difference was on average −7.1 ± 5.4 mm. The computational time to suggest the TOP was 20s. The software tool is modulable and demonstrated consistency and robustness when repeating the calculation and changing the initial position of the transducer.

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