Frontiers in Medicine (Jun 2024)

Comparing quantitative image parameters between animal and clinical CT-scanners: a translational phantom study analysis

  • Abhinay Vellala,
  • Carolin Mogler,
  • Florian Haag,
  • Fabian Tollens,
  • Henning Rudolf,
  • Friedrich Pietsch,
  • Carmen Wängler,
  • Björn Wängler,
  • Stefan O. Schoenberg,
  • Matthias F. Froelich,
  • Alexander Hertel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2024.1407235
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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PurposeThis study compares phantom-based variability of extracted radiomics features from scans on a photon counting CT (PCCT) and an experimental animal PET/CT-scanner (Albira II) to investigate the potential of radiomics for translation from animal models to human scans. While oncological basic research in animal PET/CT has allowed an intrinsic comparison between PET and CT, but no 1:1 translation to a human CT scanner due to resolution and noise limitations, Radiomics as a statistical and thus scale-independent method can potentially close the critical gap.MethodsTwo phantoms were scanned on a PCCT and animal PET/CT-scanner with different scan parameters and then the radiomics parameters were extracted. A Principal Component Analysis (PCA) was conducted. To overcome the limitation of a small dataset, a data augmentation technique was applied. A Ridge Classifier was trained and a Feature Importance- and Cluster analysis was performed.ResultsPCA and Cluster Analysis shows a clear differentiation between phantom types while emphasizing the comparability of both scanners. The Ridge Classifier exhibited a strong training performance with 93% accuracy, but faced challenges in generalization with a test accuracy of 62%.ConclusionThese results show that radiomics has great potential as a translational tool between animal models and human routine diagnostics, especially using the novel photon counting technique. This is another crucial step towards integration of radiomics analysis into clinical practice.

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