Suryanarayanan Sankararaman, Karellas Andrew, Vedantham Srinivasan, Sechopoulos Ioannis, D'Orsi Carl J
Winship Cancer Institute and Department of Radiology, Emory University School of Medicine, 1701 Uppergate Dr, Bldg C, Suite 5018, Atlanta, GA 30322, USA.
Radiology. 2007 Jul;244(1):130-7. doi: 10.1148/radiol.2441060977. Epub 2007 May 23.
To evaluate the effect of pixel size on the detection of simulated microcalcifications in a phantom with digital mammography.
A high-spatial-resolution prototype imager that yields variable pixel size (39 and 78 microm) and a clinical full-field digital mammography (FFDM) system that yields a 100-microm pixel size were used. Radiographic images of a contrast-detail (CD) phantom were obtained to perform four-alternative forced-choice observer experiments. Polymethylmethacrylate was added to obtain phantom thicknesses of 45 and 58 mm, which are typical breast thicknesses encountered in mammography. Phantom images were acquired with both systems under nearly identical exposure conditions by using an antiscatter grid. Twelve images were acquired for each phantom thickness and pixel size (for a total of 72 images), and six observers participated in this study. Observer responses were used to compute the fraction of correctly detected disks. A signal detection model was used to fit the recorded data from which CD characteristics were obtained. Repeated-measures analyses with mixed-effects linear models were performed for each of the six observers. All statistical tests were two sided and unadjusted for multiple comparisons. A P value of .05 or less was considered to indicate a significant difference.
Statistical analysis revealed significantly better CD characteristics with 39- and 78-microm pixel sizes compared with 100-microm pixel size for all disk diameters and phantom thicknesses (P<.001). Increase in phantom thickness degraded CD characteristics regardless of pixel size (P<.001).
On the basis of the conditions of this study, reducing pixel size below 100 mum with low imaging system noise enhances the visual perception of small objects that correspond to typical microcalcifications.
通过数字乳腺摄影评估像素大小对模拟乳腺模型中微钙化灶检测的影响。
使用了一种能产生可变像素大小(39和78微米)的高空间分辨率原型成像仪以及一种能产生100微米像素大小的临床全视野数字乳腺摄影(FFDM)系统。获取了对比细节(CD)模型的射线图像以进行四选一强制选择观察者实验。添加聚甲基丙烯酸甲酯以获得45和58毫米的模型厚度,这是乳腺摄影中常见的乳房厚度。在几乎相同的曝光条件下,使用防散射格栅,通过两个系统采集模型图像。对于每个模型厚度和像素大小,采集12幅图像(总共72幅图像),6名观察者参与了本研究。观察者的反应用于计算正确检测出的圆盘的比例。使用信号检测模型拟合记录的数据,从中获得CD特征。对6名观察者中的每一位进行了混合效应线性模型的重复测量分析。所有统计检验均为双侧检验,未针对多重比较进行校正。P值小于或等于0.05被认为表明存在显著差异。
统计分析显示,对于所有圆盘直径和模型厚度,与100微米像素大小相比,39微米和78微米像素大小具有显著更好的CD特征(P<0.001)。无论像素大小如何,模型厚度增加都会降低CD特征(P<0.001)。
基于本研究的条件,在低成像系统噪声的情况下,将像素大小减小到100微米以下可增强对与典型微钙化灶相对应的小物体的视觉感知。