PROJECT SUMMARY / ABSTRACT Osteoporosis (OP) and osteoarthritis (OA) cumulatively affect more than 40 million Americans. Both OP and OA are underdiagnosed and undertreated because of the limited accuracy of existing tools for diagnosis and treatment monitoring. The need for improved biomarkers of OP and OA spurred interest in quantitative evaluation of texture features of cancellous bone derived from radiography, CT, and MRI. In such “bone radiomics”, image texture provides an indirect assessment of the trabecular geometry (≤100 µm detail size) that is better suited to the limited resolution of diagnostic imaging modalities than the direct measurements used in e.g. micro-CT. Initial clinical validation of textural bone biomarkers showed promising performance in prediction of vertebral failure and progression of OA. However, rigorous investigation of how the image formation process affects textural biomarkers is essential to establish standardized protocols for imaging and analysis in bone radiomics – especially in light of emerging technologies for high-resolution imaging. Recently, new CT scanners with ~2x improved spatial resolution compared to conventional CT have been introduced by major manufacturers, including the Canon Precision system that will be used in this project. This new generation of ultra-high resolution CT (UHR CT) is capable of visualizing ~150 µm details, approaching the trabecular thickness and thus potentially enabling a breakthrough in in-vivo evaluation of bone micorarchitecture. We hypothesize that the improved spatial resolution of UHR CT will lead to better quantitative performance of bone radiomics than normal resolution CT (NR CT) or x-ray absorptiometry (DXA). To establish the clinical utility of bone radiomics using UHR-CT, the following Aims will be pursued: 1) Perform the first comprehensive assessment of the sensitivity of CT-based texture features of bone to key components of the CT imaging chain (e.g., scan and reconstruction protocol) using a high-fidelity CT simulator and experimental studies in bone core samples. We will establish UHR and NR CT features that are correlated to trabecular geometry and reproducible with respect to body size and dose. 2) Demonstrate improved prediction of trabecular stiffness using UHR CT texture features. Multivariate regression between stiffness and texture bone features investigated in Aim 1 will be performed for ~300 bone cores using UHR CT and NR CT. We will demonstrate improved stiffness estimates with UHR CT compared to NR CT. 3) Perform a clinical pilot of UHR CT-based texture features in longitudinal monitoring of OP treatment. We will acquire longitudinal UHR CT and DXA of 20 spine fusion patients being treated with OP drug to optimize their bone quality. We will demonstrate that radiomic features from UHR CT detect changes in bone quality earlier than DXA. We will also investigate the feasibility of bone radiomics in prediction of fusion outcomes. Successful completio...