Abstract

For advanced tongue cancer, the choice between surgery and organ-sparing treatment is often dependent on the expected loss of tongue functionality after treatment. Biomechanical models might assist in this choice by simulating the post-treatment function loss. However, this function loss varies between patients and should, therefore, be predicted for each patient individually. In the present study, the goal was to better predict the postoperative range of motion (ROM) of the tongue by personalizing biomechanical models using diffusion-weighted MRI and constrained spherical deconvolution reconstructions of tongue muscle architecture. Diffusion-weighted MRI scans of ten healthy volunteers were obtained to reconstruct their tongue musculature, which were subsequently registered to a previously described population average or atlas. Using the displacement fields obtained from the registration, the segmented muscle fiber tracks from the atlas were morphed back to create personalized muscle fiber tracks. Finite element models were created from the fiber tracks of the atlas and those of the individual tongues. Via inverse simulation of a protruding, downward, left and right movement, the ROM of the tongue was predicted. This prediction was compared to the ROM measured with a 3D camera. It was demonstrated that biomechanical models with personalized muscles bundles are better in approaching the measured ROM than a generic model. However, to achieve this result a correction factor was needed to compensate for the small magnitude of motion of the model. Future versions of these models may have the potential to improve the estimation of function loss after treatment for advanced tongue cancer.

Highlights

  • The incidence of tongue cancer is rising worldwide, accounting for almost 20% of all head and neck cancers (Tota et al 2017; UK Cancer Research 2019)

  • The range of motion (ROM) predicted by these biomechanical models and the atlas were compared to the measured ROM

  • The results show that, after applying a correction factor to the simulations, the personalized models were comparable to the measured ROM in 80% of the cases, whereas the atlas model was only comparable in 50% of the cases

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Summary

Introduction

The incidence of tongue cancer is rising worldwide, accounting for almost 20% of all head and neck cancers (Tota et al 2017; UK Cancer Research 2019). Advanced tongue cancer is usually treated by surgery and/ or chemoradiation, which may have a serious impact on the mobility of the tongue due to surgical defects and/or radiation-induced fibrosis. This often leads to difficulties with speech, mastication, and swallowing (Konstantinović and Dimić 1998; Kreeft et al 2009b). The prediction of the expected function loss would be of great benefit for the decision-making process shared between physician and patient. Biomechanical modeling of the tongue would be a logical step in the process of the prediction of functional loss

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