Comparison of fan-beam, slit-slat and multi-pinhole collimators for molecul breast tomosynthesis

Journal Article (2018)
Author(s)

J. van Roosmalen (TU Delft - RST/Biomedical Imaging)

F.J. Beekman (TU Delft - RST/Biomedical Imaging, MILabs B.V.)

M.C. Goorden (TU Delft - RST/Biomedical Imaging)

Research Group
RST/Biomedical Imaging
Copyright
© 2018 J. van Roosmalen, F.J. Beekman, M.C. Goorden
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/aabfa3
More Info
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Publication Year
2018
Language
English
Copyright
© 2018 J. van Roosmalen, F.J. Beekman, M.C. Goorden
Research Group
RST/Biomedical Imaging
Volume number
63
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Abstract

Recently, we proposed and optimized dedicated multi-pinhole molecular breast tomosynthesis (MBT) that images a lightly compressed breast. As MBT may also be performed with other types of collimators, the aim of this paper is to optimize MBT with fan beam and slit-slat collimators and to compare its performance to that of multi-pinhole MBT to arrive at a truly optimized design. Using analytical expressions, we first optimized fan beam and slit-slat collimator parameters to reach maximum sensitivity at a series of given system resolutions. Additionally, we performed full system simulations of a breast phantom containing several tumours for the optimized designs. We found that at equal system resolution the maximum achievable sensitivity increases from pinhole to slit-slat to fan beam collimation with fan beam and slit-slat MBT having on average a 48% and 20% higher sensitivity than multi-pinhole MBT. Furthermore, by inspecting simulated images and applying a tumour-to-background contrast-to-noise (TB-CNR) analysis, we found that slit-slat collimators underperform with respect to the other collimator types. The fan beam collimators obtained a similar TB-CNR as the pinhole collimators, but the optimum was reached at different system resolutions. For fan beam collimators, a 6–8 mm system resolution was optimal in terms of TB-CNR, while with pinhole collimation highest TB-CNR was reached in the 7–10 mm range.

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