What if you could hold a physical model of your own brain in your hands, accurate down to its every unique fold? That's just a normal part of life for Steven Keating, PhD, who had a baseball-sized tumor removed from his brain at age 26 while he was a graduate student in the MIT Media Lab's Mediated Matter Group. Curious to see what his brain actually looked like before the tumor was removed, and with the goal of better understanding his diagnosis and treatment options, Keating collected his medical data and began 3D printing his MRI and CT scans, but was frustrated that existing methods were prohibitively time-intensive and cumbersome and failed to accurately reveal important features of interest. Keating reached out to some of his group's collaborators, including members of the Wyss Institute at Harvard University, who were exploring a new method for 3D printing biological samples.

High-throughput tissue filtering, a major feature of the approach developed by the authors of the study, can help quickly remove extraneous tissues to reveal the desired underlying structures (right) without sacrificing the resolution or intensity gradients present in the native imaging data (left and center). (Credit: James Weaver and Steven Keating/Wyss Institute at Harvard University)

“It never occurred to us to use this approach for human anatomy until Steve came to us and said, ‘Guys, here's my data, what can we do?” says Ahmed Hosny, who was a research fellow with at the Wyss Institute at the time and is now a machine learning engineer at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute. The result of that impromptu collaboration — which grew to involve James Weaver, PhD, senior research scientist at the Wyss Institute; Neri Oxman, PhD, director of the MIT Media Lab's Mediated Matter Group and associate professor of media arts and sciences; and a team of researchers and physicians at several other academic and medical centers in the United States and Germany — is a new technique that allows images from MRI, CT, and other medical scans to be easily and quickly converted into physical models with unprecedented detail. The research is reported in 3D Printing and Additive Manufacturing.

“I nearly jumped out of my chair when I saw what this technology is able to do,” says Beth Ripley, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of radiology at the University of Washington and clinical radiologist at the Seattle VA, and co-author of the paper. “It creates exquisitely detailed 3D printed medical models with a fraction of the manual labor currently required, making 3D printing more accessible to the medical field as a tool for research and diagnosis.”

Imaging technologies like MRI and CT scans produce high-resolution images as a series of “slices” that reveal the details of structures inside the human body, making them an invaluable resource for evaluating and diagnosing medical conditions. Most 3D printers build physical models in a layer-by-layer process, so feeding them layers of medical images to create a solid structure is an obvious synergy between the two technologies.

However, there is a problem: MRI and CT scans produce images with so much detail that the objects of interest need to be isolated from surrounding tissue and converted into surface meshes in order to be printed. This is achieved via either a very time-intensive process called segmentation, where a radiologist manually traces the desired object on every single image slice (sometimes hundreds of images for a single sample), or an automatic “thresholding” process in which a computer program quickly converts areas that contain gray scale pixels into either solid black or solid white pixels, based on a shade of gray that is chosen to be the threshold between black and white. However, medical imaging data sets often contain objects that are irregularly shaped and lack clear, well-defined borders; as a result, auto-thresholding (or even manual segmentation) often over- or underexaggerates the size of a feature of interest and washes out critical detail.

The new method described by the paper's authors gives medical professionals the best of both worlds, offering a fast and highly accurate method for converting complex images into a format that can be easily 3D printed. The key lies in printing with dithered bitmaps, a digital file format in which each pixel of a grayscale image is converted into a series of black and white pixels, and the density of the black pixels is what defines the different shades of gray rather than the pixels themselves varying in color.

Unlike gray scale photographs, which require several shades of gray to convey gradients (left), halftones (common in newsprint images) can preserve gray scale intensity gradients using only a single color of ink (right). A similar approach was used for processing the image stacks for the 3D printed models described in the paper.

A 3D printed foot model (left) and its cross section (right) clearly reveal the intricate internal architecture of the different bone types, as well as the surrounding soft tissue. (Credit: Steven Keating and Ahmed Hosny/Wyss Institute at Harvard University)

Similar to the way images in black-and-white newsprint use varying sizes of black ink dots to convey shading, the more black pixels that are present in a given area, the darker it appears. By simplifying all pixels from various shades of gray into a mixture of black or white pixels, dithered bitmaps allow a 3D printer to print complex medical images using two different materials that preserve all the subtle variations of the original data with much greater accuracy and speed.

The team of researchers used bitmap-based 3D printing to create models of Keating's brain and tumor that faithfully preserved all of the gradations of detail present in the raw MRI data down to a resolution that is on par with what the human eye can distinguish from about 9-10 inches away. Using this same approach, they were also able to print a variable stiffness model of a human heart valve using different materials for the valve tissue versus the mineral plaques that had formed within the valve, resulting in a model that exhibited mechanical property gradients and provided new insights into the actual effects of the plaques on valve function.

“Our approach not only allows for high levels of detail to be preserved and printed into medical models, but it also saves a tremendous amount of time and money,” says Weaver, who is the corresponding author of the paper. “Manually segmenting a CT scan of a healthy human foot, with all its internal bone structure, bone marrow, tendons, muscles, soft tissue, and skin, for example, can take more than 30 hours, even by a trained professional — we were able to do it in less than an hour.”

The researchers hope that their method will help make 3D printing a more viable tool for routine exams and diagnoses, patient education, and understanding the human body. “Right now, it's just too expensive for hospitals to employ a team of specialists to go in and hand-segment image data sets for 3D printing, except in extremely high-risk or high-profile cases. We're hoping to change that,” says Hosny.

In order for that to happen, some entrenched elements of the medical field need to change as well. Most patients’ data are compressed to save space on hospital servers, so it's often difficult to get the raw MRI or CT scan files needed for high-resolution 3D printing. Additionally, the team's research was facilitated through a joint collaboration with leading 3D printer manufacturer Stratasys, which allowed access to their 3D printer's intrinsic bitmap printing capabilities. New software packages also still need to be developed to better leverage these capabilities and make them more accessible to medical professionals.

Despite these hurdles, the researchers are confident that their achievements present a significant value to the medical community. “I imagine that sometime within the next five years, the day could come when any patient that goes into a doctor's office for a routine or nonroutine CT or MRI scan will be able to get a 3D printed model of their patient-specific data within a few days,” says Weaver.

Keating, who has become a passionate advocate of efforts to enable patients to access their own medical data, still 3D prints his MRI scans to see how his skull is healing post-surgery and to check on his brain to make sure his tumor isn't coming back. “The ability to understand what's happening inside of you, to actually hold it in your hands and see the effects of treatment, is incredibly empowering,” he says.

“Curiosity is one of the biggest drivers of innovation and change for the greater good, especially when it involves exploring questions across disciplines and institutions. The Wyss Institute is proud to be a space where this kind of cross-field innovation can flourish,” says Wyss Institute Founding Director Donald Ingber, MD, PhD, who is also the Judah Folkman Professor of Vascular Biology at Harvard Medical School (HMS) and the Vascular Biology Program at Boston Children's Hospital, as well as professor of bioengineering at Harvard's John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences (SEAS).

This work was supported by a grant from the Human Frontier Science Program, the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, and a Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz-Preis 2010.

Additional authors of the paper are: Joshua Dilley, MD, an anesthesiologist at Massachusetts General Hospital; Tatiana Kelil, MD, a clinical fellow in radiology at Brigham and Women's Hospital; Steve Pieper, PhD, a computer scientist at the Surgical Planning Laboratory at BWH and CEO of Isomics, Inc.; Dominik Kolb, MS, a former research assistant at the MIT Media Lab; Christoph Bader, MS, a research assistant at the MIT Media Lab; Anne-Marie Pobloth, DVM, a group leader at the Julius Wolff Institute for Bio-mechanics and Musculoskeletal Regeneration at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin; Molly Griffin, from the Gillette Center for Women's Cancer at MGH; Reza Nezafat, PhD, associate professor of medicine at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center; Georg Duda, PhD, director of the Julius Wolff Institute and professor for biomechanics and Musculoskeletal Regeneration at Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin; Ennio Ciocca, MD, PhD, co-director, Institute for the Neurosciences and professor of neurosurgery at HMS; James Stone, MD, PhD, an associate pathologist at MGH and associate professor of pathology at HMS; James Michaelson, PhD, director of the Laboratory for Quantitative Medicine at MGH; and Mason Dean, PhD, a group leader at the Max Planck Institute of Colloids and Interfaces‥

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