Rationale and objectives: To evaluate cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) for monitoring of tibial bone defect healing in comparison to histopathological findings.
Materials and methods: Circumscribed tibial bone defects were created in 16 mini-pigs and imaging of the tibia was performed on day 42 using a modern CBCT scanner with flat panel detector (PaX-Duo3D, Vatech, Korea). The extent of osseous consolidation including remaining calcium phosphate granules was measured quantitatively by a CBCT volumetry tool using commercially available software (Osirix Imaging software, Pixmeo, Geneva, Switzerland). Volumes of the entire defect (including all pixels), areas of osseous consolidation (density values >2350) and nonmineralized areas (density values <2350) of the defect were determined. The extent of bone regeneration was determined and correlated with the histomorphometrical reference standard. Independently, a visual semiquantitative CBCT-score was applied (4-point scale) to assess bone defect healing.
Results: The extent of osseous consolidation in CBCT volumetry ranged from 14% to 92% (mean, 63.4 ± 17.6%). There was a significant positive correlation between histologically visible newly formed bone and the extent of bone regeneration on CBCT volumetry (r = 0.74-0.79, P < .001). The visual score matched with the volumetric results in 75% of the cases.
Conclusion: CBCT volumetry allows for reliable, noninvasive quantitative monitoring of bone defect healing and correlates significantly with histological findings. CBCT is a promising technique for imaging of peripheral bones suggesting further evaluation in clinical trials.
Copyright © 2012 AUR. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.