Abstract

Cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) imaging is becoming an indispensable intraoperative tool; however, the current field of view prevents visualization of long anatomical sites, limiting clinical utility. Here, we demonstrate the longitudinal extension of the intraoperative CBCT field of view using a multi-turn reverse helical scan and assess potential clinical utility in interventional procedures. A fixed-room robotic CBCT imaging system, with additional real-time control, was used to implement a multi-turn reverse helical scan. The scan consists of C-arm rotation, through a series of clockwise and anticlockwise rotations, combined with simultaneous programmed table translation. The motion properties and geometric accuracy of the multi-turn reverse helical imaging trajectory were examined using a simple geometric phantom. To assess potential clinical utility, a pedicle screw posterior fixation procedure in the thoracic spine from T1 to T12 was performed on an ovine cadaver. The multi-turn reverse helical scan was used to provide postoperative assessment of the screw insertion via cortical breach grading and mean screw angle error measurements (axial and sagittal) from 2 observers. For all screw angle measurements, the intraclass correlation coefficient was calculated to determine observer reliability. The multi-turn reverse helical scans took 100 seconds to complete and increased the longitudinal coverage by 370% from 17 cm to 80 cm. Geometric accuracy was examined by comparing the measured to actual dimensions (0.2 ± 0.1 mm) and angles (0.2 ± 0.1 degrees) of a simple geometric phantom, indicating that the multi-turn reverse helical scan provided submillimeter and degree accuracy with no distortion. During the pedicle screw procedure in an ovine cadaver, the multi-turn reverse helical scan identified 4 cortical breaches, confirmed via the postoperative CT scan. Directly comparing the screw insertion angles (n = 22) measured in the postoperative multi-turn reverse helical and CT scans revealed an average difference of 3.3 ± 2.6 degrees in axial angle and 1.9 ± 1.5 degrees in the sagittal angle from 2 expert observers. The intraclass correlation coefficient was above 0.900 for all measurements (axial and sagittal) across all scan types (conventional CT, multi-turn reverse helical, and conventional CBCT), indicating excellent reliability between observers. Extended longitudinal field-of-view intraoperative 3-dimensional imaging with a multi-turn reverse helical scan is feasible on a clinical robotic CBCT imaging system, enabling long anatomical sites to be visualized in a single image, including in the presence of metal hardware.

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