Abstract:
A plurality of diagnostic images of a region of interest of a subject are generated and stored in a patient database ( 10 ). In one of the images, a region of interest, such as a tumor, is identified. The database is searched for the other images of the same region of interest . Parameter values indicative of characteristics of the tumor are extracted from each image and displayed in tabular or graphic format by time. The images are reformatted, scaled, and displayed in a è format to illustrate a temporal evolution of the tumor in the region of interest.

Description:
DESCRIPTION  
       [0001]     The present invention relates to disease or physical condition analysis and reporting. It finds particular application in conjunction with monitoring disease or physical progression over time and will be described with particular reference thereto. It is to be appreciated, however, that the present invention is applicable to cross patient studies, and other applications as well.  
         [0002]     There is a long standing interest in tracking the progression of disease and physical conditions of patients. When a patient is initially diagnosed, the speed with which a condition is progressing affects a prescribed treatment regimen. After a patient receives a regimen of treatment, follow-up visits ascertain the quality and effectiveness of the prescribed treatment, whether other courses of action are in order, and the like. A significant portion of this patient tracking and continued diagnosis occurs in the realm of diagnostic imaging. A patient with symptoms is diagnosed or a diagnosis is confirmed using an imaging procedure.  
         [0003]     Today, a patient&#39;s medical records are typically maintained in a computer database. The record includes previous diagnostic images, although the prior images are often of differing regions of the body and were generated with imaging parameters and in imaging modalities geared for other types of examinations. Nonetheless, the diagnosing physician can page through the images in the patient&#39;s file manually to look for images that include the same region and might provide insights into the development of the problem. Further, after or during the treatment, the patient may return for further imaging to assess the success of the treatment. The physician can retrieve prior images at various stages in the treatment and display them, side by side with the current image. The physician can visually compare the latest image with the previous image or previous images with each other. The progression of the images aids the physician in making a determination about the rate of progress of the malady and success of the treatment.  
         [0004]     Currently, the images to be compared are displayed concurrently in separate windows on a computer monitor, or similar display device. This can be cumbersome, and the progression of the region of interest can be intuitively difficult to follow. Additionally, the images often were taken at different time intervals and have a different scale, perspective, contrast, and other image properties. For instance, two images of an irregularly shaped brain tumor taken from different angles may show the tumor as being different sizes. In such a scenario, it would be difficult to tell whether the tumor actually changed in size, or if one viewed image was taken through a slice in which a direction in which the tumor is wider.  
         [0005]     Although imaging sequences and scans can be saved and reproduced, it is difficult to accurately reproduce the physical position of a patient within a scanner on different days. Slightly different patient positions from scan to scan will result in slightly different image perspectives, given the exact same imaging scan or sequence.  
         [0006]     More factors are introduced if a physician attempts to do a cross-modality comparison. For instance, the patient with the brain tumor may have a current MRI and an older CT scan that includes the region. Different modalities emphasize different tissue properties and may show the tumor with different degrees of differentiation relative to the surrounding tissue.  
         [0007]     The present application contemplates a new and improved object identification system, which overcomes the above-referenced problems and others.  
         [0008]     In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, a diagnostic image processing system is provided. A parameter extraction processor extracts selected parameter values from a diagnostic image representation or from data for generating the diagnostic image. A subject database stores the image representation and the extracted parameter values in association with at least a patient identity and a date. The database is updated each time the subject is imaged. A report formatting means formats the extracted parameter values from a plurality of diagnostic images generated at different times into a report.  
         [0009]     In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, a method of diagnostic image processing is provided. A diagnostic image representation is displayed and a region of interest is selected on the display. Parameter values from the selected region are extracted. The image representation along with the extracted parameter values are stored in a database in association with at least a subject identity and a date. The extracted parameter values from a plurality of diagnostic images are formatted into a report.  
         [0010]     One advantage of the present invention resides in improved patient progress tracking.  
         [0011]     Another advantage resides in improved patient diagnosis and treatment planning.  
         [0012]     Another advantage resides in a more intuitively meaningful image display.  
         [0013]     Another advantage results in easier cross-modality scan comparison.  
         [0014]     Another advantage resides in easier scan result comparison.  
         [0015]     Still further advantages and benefits of the present invention will become apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art upon reading and understanding the following detailed description of the preferred embodiments. 
     
    
       [0016]     The invention may take form in various components and arrangements of components, and in various steps and arrangements of steps. The drawings are only for purposes of illustrating the preferred embodiments and are not to be construed as limiting the invention.  
         [0017]      FIG. 1  is a diagrammatic illustration of an imaging system with repeated examination capabilities;  
         [0018]      FIG. 2  is a flow diagram illustrating the construction of a repeated examination report; and,  
         [0019]      FIG. 3  is an exemplary report format including a graphical representation of a progression vs. time. 
     
    
       [0020]     With reference to  FIG. 1 , a variety of diagnostic imagers are connected with a hospital database  10 . Preferably, the diagnostic imagers include a high field magnetic resonance (MR) scanner  12 , a low field MR scanner  14 , a CT scanner  16 , a nuclear camera  18 , and a digital x-ray system  20 . Other diagnostic imaging equipment is also contemplated. Each diagnostic imager includes or is associated with a reconstruction processor for implementing reconstruction algorithms for the corresponding modality. Typically, selected reconstructed images are saved into the patient&#39;s record in the hospital database  10  rather than the underlying data although either or both can be. The images, preferably volume images, are stored with an electronic indication of the imaged region.  
         [0021]     Looking to the high field magnetic resonance scanner  12  by way of example, the data from the scanner is reconstructed by a reconstruction processor  30  and stored into an image memory  32 . A video processor  34  withdraws selected portions of the reconstructed image for display on a video or other human readable monitor  36 . The other scanners include similar reconstruction processors, image memories, video processors, and displays.  
         [0022]     Using a mouse  40  or other suitable pointing and drawing means, the operator outlines the region of interest on a displayed image or otherwise indicates the region of interest. Taking the monitoring of a tumor, by way of example, a processor or means  42  isolates the designated tumor from the surrounding tissue. This may be done by comparing gray scale or other properties of the designated tumor relative to the surrounding tissue in the diagnostic image memory. The generated isolated image of the tumor of interest is stored in a memory  44  which is examined by a parameter extraction processor or means  46  that extracts parameters of the isolated tumor such as its volume, average density, blood flow rate to or through it, diffusion coefficients, fractional diffusion anisotropy values, spectroscopic values, metabolic information, and the like. The extracted parameters are preferably stored with the image data in the patient database  10  to facilitate the comparison of these parameters with similar parameters derived from earlier or later images.  
         [0023]     To monitor the progress of the tumor, the operator initiates a program  50  which searches the hospital database  10  for other images of the same patient which include the region surrounding the tumor. Images of the region of the patient which include the tumor are analyzed  52  to isolate the tissue which is at the same location as the tumor.  
         [0024]     Once the corresponding portion of the archived images has been located, a reformatting means  54  reformats the images to convert the images to the same viewing direction such as with a multi-planar reformatting technique which re-grids the images and scales the reformatted images as the present examination images. The reformatted images of the same region of interest are then provided to the video processor  34  for display on the monitor  36 . The isolating means  42  is then used manually or automatically to isolate the tissue at the same location as the tumor with similar grayscale, MR number, or other similar characteristic. Preferably, the isolating means goes to the same location and tries to isolate a tumor with the same physical properties. The automatic isolating means may or may not be successful. For example, some of the images may have been taken before there was a tumor. Others may have been taken in a modality in which the tumor is hard to distinguish. Also, the tumor may have grown eccentrically. That is, in early images, the tumor could have been displaced from the current center of mass and the program may be missing it. The diagnosing physician uses the cursor  40  to outline regions of potential interest on each of the archived images for isolation and analysis.  
         [0025]     Some of the retrieved archived images may have been stored with a coordinate shift relative to the current diagnostic image. In one embodiment, the operator manually designates a corresponding point in each image and a reformatting means  54  shifts the images to align the common points. In another embodiment, a pattern comparing means  56  compares the images of generally similar regions of the subject by isolating common landmark points, the pattern means  56  determines a transform which translates the images into registration.  
         [0026]     Once the prior images have been retrieved and the corresponding regions registered and the tumor or other tissue of interest isolated, the parameters extracted by the parameter extraction means  46  are sent to a report formatting processor or means  60 . The report formatting means  60  includes a plurality of report generation options. The extracted values are ordered by the data compilation processor  60  and placed into a repeated examination report, that is, they are placed in an intuitive visual format, preferably according to date. Charts, tables, graphs and other comparable display formats are suitable for presenting the extracted values. For example, in a patient who has a brain tumor, one of the likely extracted values would be size of the tumor. A chart that shows the size of the brain tumor as a function of time would be one exemplary mode of display. Not all values will be available in every imaging modality. Preferably, dates corresponding to data points with no data are omitted from the presentation of that value. More specifically, a table option  62  generates a table which sets forth corresponding parameters of interest from each of the preceding images. For example, the table could set forth the volume of the tumor in each image, the date of the image, etc. in tabular format. A graphing means or algorithm  64  presents a selected parameter of the tumor, such as volume or tissue density, and plots the change in that parameter versus time. Because the prior images have probably not been taken at regular periodic images, the graphing processor includes a means  66  for scaling the time between exams to make the timeline of the graphs linear, logarithmic, or the like.  
         [0027]     Of course, for retrieved images that were stored after treatment commenced, the parameter extraction means may simply extract the measured parameters which were stored with the images.  
         [0028]     Over time, patients may be imaged repeatedly, with multiple image modalities. With reference to  FIG. 2 , the process for incorporating further scans of the patient into the patient database  10  is illustrated. Before beginning a patient&#39;s treatment, an initial scan of the patient is performed  70 . An image is reconstructed and displayed for the user  72 . The user then selects a region of interest of the image  74 . Preferably, the region includes a portion of a static body structure, to aid in future image registrations. After the region of interest is selected, selected image parameters are then withdrawn from the image  76 . The hospital database  10  is searched  78  for prior images of the same region of the subject. These archived images are reformatted and scaled  80 . The same regions of each image are analyzed, either automatically or manually, and the selected parameters are extracted  82 . The extracted parameters are stored  84  in the patient database  10 . Once the parameters have been extracted and stored, they need not be extracted again. Of course, if new extraction techniques are developed, the extraction process can be repeated. The extracted parameters are formatted  86  into a report format such as a table or a graph as illustrated in  FIG. 3 . The reports are used by the physician to confirm a diagnosis, plan treatment, and the like.  
         [0029]     After the scan, the patient receives the prescribed therapy, e.g. chemotherapy or oncological radiation therapy. Alternately, the “treatment” may simply be the passage of time, such as allowing a broken bone to mend. In either case, periods of time lapses between diagnostic image sessions, to allow the region to respond to the administered treatment, whether it is active or passive. After sufficient time has elapsed, a new scan of the region of interest is performed  90 . If the same scan is desired, a sequence controller  91  accesses the patient database  10  to retrieve the sequence used to generate the baseline image and recreates that sequence. Alternately, a different sequence may be used, generating different geometries or resolutions, or a different modality entirely may be used. In either instance, downstream software identifies  92  the corresponding region of interest in a subsequent image. Parameters are extracted  94  from the new raw data set and image and are, in turn, stored  84  in the patient database  10  according to patient ID and date. If different parameters are extracted, the prior images are retrieved from the patient database  10  and the new parameters are extracted from them. After each imaging session the report and the database  10  are updated to chart the progression of the region of interest over time.  
         [0030]     In another display embodiment, with reference again to  FIG. 1 , when a set of images and corresponding data values are selected for viewing, the registration processor  54  reformats and registers the retrieved images to the baseline image. Preferably, the image is translated, rotated, and uniformly scaled to bring it into alignment with the original image. Once all images are registered, they are displayed to the user in an intuitive format. For example, all the images in order by time are displayed on the user interface  36  concurrently. In another example, a cinè processor  100  processes the images for display in a cine mode, showing an action progression of the region of interest over time. To supplement the cine mode, an extrapolator  102  compares the images, and their dates, and extrapolate intermediate sub-images between the actual images as needed to generate all the image frames for a cine display with a linear or other selected timeline. The extrapolator  102  creates images based on a real time scale (e.g. one frame per week) to aid in visual intuitiveness.  
         [0031]     The invention has been described with reference to the preferred embodiments. Modifications and alterations will occur to others upon a reading and understanding of the preceding detailed description. It is intended that the invention be construed as including all such modifications and alterations insofar as they come within the scope of the appended claims or the equivalents thereof.