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Comparison between MR and CT imaging used to correct for skull-induced phase aberrations during transcranial focused ultrasound.

Authors: Leung SA, Moore D, Gilbo Y, Snell J, Webb TD, Meyer CH, Miller GW, Ghanouni P, Butts Pauly K

Transcranial focused ultrasound with the InSightec Exablate system uses thermal ablation for the treatment of movement and mood disorders and blood brain barrier disruption for tumor therapy. The system uses computed tomography (CT) images to calculate phase corrections that account for aberrations caused by the human skull. This work investigates whether magnetic resonance (MR) images can be used as an alternative to CT images to calculate phase corrections. Phase corrections were calculated using the gold standard hydrophone method and the standard of care InSightec ray tracing method. MR binary image mask, MR-simulated-CT (MRsimCT), and CT images of three ex vivo human skulls were supplied as inputs to the InSightec ray tracing method. The degassed ex vivo human skulls were sonicated with a 670 kHz hemispherical phased array transducer (InSightec Exablate 4000). 3D raster scans of the beam profiles were acquired using a hydrophone mounted on a 3-axis positioner system. Focal spots were evaluated using six metrics: pressure at the target, peak pressure, intensity at the target, peak intensity, positioning error, and focal spot volume. Targets at the geometric focus and 5 mm lateral to the geometric focus were investigated. There was no statistical difference between any of the metrics at either target using either MRsimCT or CT for phase aberration correction. As opposed to the MRsimCT, the use of CT images for aberration correction requires registration to the treatment day MR images; CT misregistration within a range of ± 2 degrees of rotation error along three dimensions was shown to reduce focal spot intensity by up to 9.4%. MRsimCT images used for phase aberration correction for the skull produce similar results as CT-based correction, while avoiding both CT to MR registration errors and unnecessary patient exposure to ionizing radiation.

Introduction

Purpose Other
Study Objective To determine whether MR-derived images (MRsimCT) can be used instead of CT to calculate skull phase corrections for transcranial focused ultrasound beamforming with the InSightec Exablate system.
Animal model / Human subject Homo sapiens (ex vivo human skulls); strain: N/A; age: not reported; sex: not reported
Disease model Healthy
MRI or image guidance method CT, MRsimCT, and MR binary image mask
Target coordinates 5 mm left of the geometric focus

Outcomes and Safety

Summary of Outcomes MRsimCT performed comparably to CT for phase correction across focal pressure, intensity, positioning error, and focal spot volume. MRsimCT also avoids CT-MR registration error and ionizing rafiation, while MR binary mask performace degraded during 5 mm steering.
Safety-related matter Ex vivo phase-correction/imaging comparison study.

Brain Region

Visualization unavailable

Ultrasound Parameters

Ultrasound instrument InSightec Exablate 4000 (InSightec); 670 kHz hemispherical phased-array transducer; aperture/diameter: None
FUS Frequency 670 kHz
FUS Pressure Target pressure: 0.16-0.31 Mpa; peak pressure: 0.19-0.31 Mpa
FUS Mode pulsed
Pulse duration 2 ms (2 ms on, 50 ms off pulsing scheme); 3 ms (hydrophone method)
Focal Characteristics focal depth: None; focal length: None; aperture size: None

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