Abstract
This study investigates the effects of various training protocols on enhancing the precision of MRI-only Pseudo-CT generation for radiation treatment planning and adaptation in head & neck cancer patients. It specifically tackles the challenge of differentiating bone from air, a limitation that frequently results in substantial deviations in the representation of bony structures on Pseudo-CT images. The study included 25 patients, utilizing pre-treatment MRI-CT image pairs. Five cases were randomly selected for testing, with the remaining 20 used for model training and validation. A 3D U-Net deep learning model was employed, trained on patches of size 643with an overlap of 323. MRI scans were acquired using the Dixon gradient echo (GRE) technique, and various contrasts were explored to improve Pseudo-CT accuracy, including in-phase, water-only, and combined water-only and fat-only images. Additionally, bone extraction from the fat-only image was integrated as an additional channel to better capture bone structures on Pseudo-CTs. The evaluation involved both image quality and dosimetric metrics. The generated Pseudo-CTs were compared with their corresponding registered target CTs. The mean absolute error (MAE) and peak signal-to-noise ratio (PSNR) for the base model using combined water-only and fat-only images were 19.20 ± 5.30 HU and 57.24 ± 1.44 dB, respectively. Following the integration of an additional channel using a CT-guided bone segmentation, the model's performance improved, achieving MAE and PSNR of 18.32 ± 5.51 HU and 57.82 ± 1.31 dB, respectively. The dosimetric assessment confirmed that radiation treatment planning on Pseudo-CT achieved accuracy comparable to conventional CT. The measured results are statistically significant, with ap-value < 0.05. This study demonstrates improved accuracy in bone representation on Pseudo-CTs achieved through a combination of water-only, fat-only and extracted bone images; thus, enhancing feasibility of MRI-based simulation for radiation treatment planning.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have