Abstract

Background and purposeManual delineation of clinical target volumes (CTVs) and organs at risk (OARs) is time-consuming, and automatic contouring tools lack clinical validation. We aimed to construct and validate the use of convolutional neural networks (CNNs) to set better contouring standards for rectal cancer radiotherapy. Materials and methodsWe retrospectively collected and evaluated computed tomography (CT) scans of 199 rectal cancer patients treated at our hospital from February 2018 to April 2019. Two CNNs—DeepLabv3+ for extracting high-level semantic information and ResUNet for extracting low-level visual features—were used for the CTV and small intestine contouring, and bladder and femoral head contouring, respectively. Contouring quality was compared using the paired t test. Five-point objective grading was performed independently by two experienced radiation oncologists and verified by a third. The CNN manual correction time was recorded. ResultsCTVs calculated using DeepLabv3+ (CTVDeepLabv3+) had significant quantitative parameter advantages over CTVResUNet (volumetric Dice coefficient, 0.88 vs 0.87, P = 0.0005; surface Dice coefficient, 0.79 vs 0.78, P = 0.008). Among 315 graded cases, DeepLabv3+ obtained the highest scores with 284 cases, consistent with the objective criteria, whereas CTVResUNet had the minimum mean manual correction time (7.29 min). DeepLabv3+ performed better than ResUNet for small intestine contouring and ResUNet performed better for bladder and femoral head contouring. The manual correction time for OARs was <4 min for both models. ConclusionCNNs at various feature resolution levels well delineate rectal cancer CTVs and OARs, displaying high quality and requiring shorter computation and manual correction time.

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