Abstract

PurposeDose computation using cone beam computed tomography (CBCT) images is inaccurate for the purpose of adaptive treatment planning. The main goal of this study is to assess the dosimetric accuracy of synthetic computed tomography (CT)‐based calculation for adaptive planning in the upper abdominal region. We hypothesized that deep learning‐based synthetically generated CT images will produce comparable results to a deformed CT (CTdef) in terms of dose calculation, while displaying a more accurate representation of the daily anatomy and therefore superior dosimetric accuracy.MethodsWe have implemented a cycle‐consistent generative adversarial networks (CycleGANs) architecture to synthesize CT images from the daily acquired CBCT image with minimal error. CBCT and CT images from 17 liver stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) patients were used to train, test, and validate the algorithm.ResultsThe synthetically generated images showed increased signal‐to‐noise ratio, contrast resolution, and reduced root mean square error, mean absolute error, noise, and artifact severity. Superior edge matching, sharpness, and preservation of anatomical structures from the CBCT images were observed for the synthetic images when compared to the CTdef registration method. Three verification plans (CBCT, CTdef, and synthetic) were created from the original treatment plan and dose volume histogram (DVH) statistics were calculated. The synthetic‐based calculation shows comparatively similar results to the CTdef‐based calculation with a maximum mean deviation of 1.5%.ConclusionsOur findings show that CycleGANs can produce reliable synthetic images for the adaptive delivery framework. Dose calculations can be performed on synthetic images with minimal error. Additionally, enhanced image quality should translate into better daily alignment, increasing treatment delivery accuracy.

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