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Published online before print May 11, 2009
British Journal of Radiology 2009, doi:10.1259/bjr/52611898

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© 2009 The British Institute of Radiology

Full paper

Evaluation of a three-dimensional ultrasound localisation system incorporating probe pressure correction for use in partial breast irradiation

E J HARRIS 1, R SYMONDS-TAYLOR 1, G M TREECE 2, A H GEE 2, R W PRAGER 2, P BRABANTS 3, P M EVANS 1

1 Joint Department of Physics, Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton, Surrey SM2 5PT, UK
2 Department of Engineering, University of Cambridge, Trumpington Street, Cambridge, UK
3 QADOS Ltd, 5 Lakeside Business Park, Swan Lane, Sandhurst, Berkshire GU47 9DN, UK


   Abstract

This work evaluates a three-dimensional (3D) freehand ultrasound-based localisation system with new probe pressure correction for use in partial breast irradiation. Accuracy and precision of absolute position measurement was measured as a function of imaging depth (ID), object depth, scanning direction and time using a water phantom containing crossed wires. To quantify the improvement in accuracy due to pressure correction, 3D scans of a breast phantom containing ball bearings were obtained with and without pressure. Ball bearing displacements were then measured with and without pressure correction. Using a single scan direction (for all imaging depths), the mean error was <1.3 mm, with the exception of the wires at 68.5 mm imaged with an ID of 85 mm, which gave a mean error of -2.3 mm. Precision was greater than 1 mm for any single scan direction. For multiple scan directions, precision was within 1.7 mm. Probe pressure corrections of between 0 mm and 2.2 mm have been observed for pressure displacements of 1.1 mm to 4.2 mm. Overall, anteroposterior position measurement accuracy increased from 2.2 mm to 1.6 mm and to 1.4 mm for the two opposing scanning directions. Precision is comparable to that reported for other commercially available ultrasound localisation systems, provided that 3D image acquisition is performed in the same scan direction. The existing temporal calibration is imperfect and a per-installation calibration would further improve the accuracy and precision. Probe pressure correction was shown to improve the accuracy and will be useful for the localisation of the excision cavity in partial breast radiotherapy.







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