12 research outputs found

    A 2.5D convolutional neural network for HPV prediction in advanced oropharyngeal cancer

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    ackground Infection with human papilloma virus (HPV) is one of the most relevant prognostic factors in advanced oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) treatment. In this study we aimed to assess the diagnostic accuracy of a deep learning-based method for HPV status prediction in computed tomography (CT) images of advanced OPC. Method An internal dataset and three public collections were employed (internal: n = 151, HNC1: n = 451; HNC2: n = 80; HNC3: n = 110). Internal and HNC1 datasets were used for training, whereas HNC2 and HNC3 collections were used as external test cohorts. All CT scans were resampled to a 2 mm3 resolution and a sub-volume of 72x72x72 pixels was cropped on each scan, centered around the tumor. Then, a 2.5D input of size 72x72x3 pixels was assembled by selecting the 2D slice containing the largest tumor area along the axial, sagittal and coronal planes, respectively. The convolutional neural network employed consisted of the first 5 modules of the Xception model and a small classification network. Ten-fold cross-validation was applied to evaluate training performance. At test time, soft majority voting was used to predict HPV status. Results A final training mean [range] area under the curve (AUC) of 0.84 [0.76–0.89], accuracy of 0.76 [0.64–0.83] and F1-score of 0.74 [0.62–0.83] were achieved. AUC/accuracy/F1-score values of 0.83/0.75/0.69 and 0.88/0.79/0.68 were achieved on the HNC2 and HNC3 test sets, respectively. Conclusion Deep learning was successfully applied and validated in two external cohorts to predict HPV status in CT images of advanced OPC, proving its potential as a support tool in cancer precision medicine

    Patient-specific quality assurance strategies for synthetic computed tomography in magnetic resonance-only radiotherapy of the abdomen

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    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The superior tissue contrast of magnetic resonance (MR) compared to computed tomography (CT) led to an increasing interest towards MR-only radiotherapy. For the latter, the dose calculation should be performed on a synthetic CT (sCT). Patient-specific quality assurance (PSQA) methods have not been established yet and this study aimed to assess several software-based solutions. MATERIALS AND METHODS A retrospective study was performed on 20 patients treated at an MR-Linac, which were selected to evenly cover four subcategories: (i) standard, (ii) air pockets, (iii) lung and (iv) implant cases. The neural network (NN) CycleGAN was adopted to generate a reference sCT, which was then compared to four PSQA methods: (A) water override of body, (B) five tissue classes with bulk densities, (C) sCT generated by a separate NN (pix2pix) and (D) deformed CT. RESULTS The evaluation of the dose endpoints demonstrated that while all methods A-D provided statistically equivalent results (p = 0.05) within the 2% level for the standard cases (i), only the methods C-D guaranteed the same result over the whole cohort. The bulk densities override was shown to be a valuable method in absence of lung tissue within the beam path. CONCLUSION The observations of this study suggested that the use of an additional sCT generated by a separate NN was an appropriate tool to perform PSQA of a sCT in an MR-only workflow at an MR-Linac. The time and dose endpoints requirements were respected, namely within 10 min and 2%

    Synthetic computed tomography for low-field magnetic resonance-guided radiotherapy in the abdomen

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    Background and purpose The requirement of computed tomography (CT) for radiotherapy planning may be bypassed by synthetic CT (sCT) generated from magnetic resonance (MR), which has recently led to the clinical introduction of MR-only radiotherapy for specific sites. Further developments are required for abdominal sCT, mostly due to the presence of mobile air pockets affecting the dose calculation. In this study we aimed to overcome this limitation for abdominal sCT at a low field (0.35 T) hybrid MR-Linac. Materials and methods A retrospective analysis was conducted enrolling 168 patients corresponding to 215 MR-CT pairs. After the exclusion criteria, 152 volumetric images were used to train the cycle-consistent generative adversarial network (CycleGAN) and 34 to test the sCT. Image similarity metrics and dose recalculation analysis were performed. Results The generated sCT faithfully reproduced the original CT and the location of the air pockets agreed with the MR scan. The dose calculation did not require manual bulk density overrides and the mean deviations of the dose-volume histogram dosimetric points were within 1 % of the CT, without any outlier above 2 %. The mean gamma passing rates were above 99 % for the 2 %/ 2 mm analysis and no cases below 95 % were observed. Conclusions This study presented the implementation of CycleGAN to perform sCT generation in the abdominal region for a low field hybrid MR-Linac. The sCT was shown to correctly allocate the electron density for the mobile air pockets and the dosimetric analysis demonstrated the potential for future implementation of MR-only radiotherapy in the abdomen

    Synthetic computed tomography for low-field magnetic resonance-only radiotherapy in head-and-neck cancer using residual vision transformers

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    BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Synthetic computed tomography (sCT) scans are necessary for dose calculation in magnetic resonance (MR)-only radiotherapy. While deep learning (DL) has shown remarkable performance in generating sCT scans from MR images, research has predominantly focused on high-field MR images. This study presents the first implementation of a DL model for sCT generation in head-and-neck (HN) cancer using low-field MR images. Specifically, the use of vision transformers (ViTs) was explored. MATERIALS AND METHODS The dataset consisted of 31 patients, resulting in 196 pairs of deformably-registered computed tomography (dCT) and MR scans. The latter were obtained using a balanced steady-state precession sequence on a 0.35T scanner. Residual ViTs were trained on 2D axial, sagittal, and coronal slices, respectively, and the final sCTs were generated by averaging the models' outputs. Different image similarity metrics, dose volume histogram (DVH) deviations, and gamma analyses were computed on the test set (n = 6). The overlap between auto-contours on sCT scans and manual contours on MR images was evaluated for different organs-at-risk using the Dice score. RESULTS The median [range] value of the test mean absolute error was 57 [37-74] HU. DVH deviations were below 1% for all structures. The median gamma passing rates exceeded 94% in the 2%/2mm analysis (threshold = 90%). The median Dice scores were above 0.7 for all organs-at-risk. CONCLUSIONS The clinical applicability of DL-based sCT generation from low-field MR images in HN cancer was proved. High sCT-dCT similarity and dose metric accuracy were achieved, and sCT suitability for organs-at-risk auto-delineation was shown

    Systematic Review on the Association of Radiomics with Tumor Biological Endpoints

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    Radiomics supposes an alternative non-invasive tumor characterization tool, which has experienced increased interest with the advent of more powerful computers and more sophisticated machine learning algorithms. Nonetheless, the incorporation of radiomics in cancer clinical-decision support systems still necessitates a thorough analysis of its relationship with tumor biology. Herein, we present a systematic review focusing on the clinical evidence of radiomics as a surrogate method for tumor molecular profile characterization. An extensive literature review was conducted in PubMed, including papers on radiomics and a selected set of clinically relevant and commonly used tumor molecular markers. We summarized our findings based on different cancer entities, additionally evaluating the effect of different modalities for the prediction of biomarkers at each tumor site. Results suggest the existence of an association between the studied biomarkers and radiomics from different modalities and different tumor sites, even though a larger number of multi-center studies are required to further validate the reported outcomes

    Systematic Review on the Association of Radiomics with Tumor Biological Endpoints

    Full text link
    Radiomics supposes an alternative non-invasive tumor characterization tool, which has experienced increased interest with the advent of more powerful computers and more sophisticated machine learning algorithms. Nonetheless, the incorporation of radiomics in cancer clinical-decision support systems still necessitates a thorough analysis of its relationship with tumor biology. Herein, we present a systematic review focusing on the clinical evidence of radiomics as a surrogate method for tumor molecular profile characterization. An extensive literature review was conducted in PubMed, including papers on radiomics and a selected set of clinically relevant and commonly used tumor molecular markers. We summarized our findings based on different cancer entities, additionally evaluating the effect of different modalities for the prediction of biomarkers at each tumor site. Results suggest the existence of an association between the studied biomarkers and radiomics from different modalities and different tumor sites, even though a larger number of multi-center studies are required to further validate the reported outcomes

    A 2.5D convolutional neural network for HPV prediction in advanced oropharyngeal cancer

    No full text
    Background Infection with human papilloma virus (HPV) is one of the most relevant prognostic factors in advanced oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) treatment. In this study we aimed to assess the diagnostic accuracy of a deep learning-based method for HPV status prediction in computed tomography (CT) images of advanced OPC. Method An internal dataset and three public collections were employed (internal: n = 151, HNC1: n = 451; HNC2: n = 80; HNC3: n = 110). Internal and HNC1 datasets were used for training, whereas HNC2 and HNC3 collections were used as external test cohorts. All CT scans were resampled to a 2 mm3 resolution and a sub-volume of 72x72x72 pixels was cropped on each scan, centered around the tumor. Then, a 2.5D input of size 72x72x3 pixels was assembled by selecting the 2D slice containing the largest tumor area along the axial, sagittal and coronal planes, respectively. The convolutional neural network employed consisted of the first 5 modules of the Xception model and a small classification network. Ten-fold cross-validation was applied to evaluate training performance. At test time, soft majority voting was used to predict HPV status. Results A final training mean [range] area under the curve (AUC) of 0.84 [0.76–0.89], accuracy of 0.76 [0.64–0.83] and F1-score of 0.74 [0.62–0.83] were achieved. AUC/accuracy/F1-score values of 0.83/0.75/0.69 and 0.88/0.79/0.68 were achieved on the HNC2 and HNC3 test sets, respectively. Conclusion Deep learning was successfully applied and validated in two external cohorts to predict HPV status in CT images of advanced OPC, proving its potential as a support tool in cancer precision medicine.ISSN:0010-482

    Synthetic computed tomography for low-field magnetic resonance-guided radiotherapy in the abdomen

    No full text
    Background and purpose: The requirement of computed tomography (CT) for radiotherapy planning may be bypassed by synthetic CT (sCT) generated from magnetic resonance (MR), which has recently led to the clinical introduction of MR-only radiotherapy for specific sites. Further developments are required for abdominal sCT, mostly due to the presence of mobile air pockets affecting the dose calculation. In this study we aimed to overcome this limitation for abdominal sCT at a low field (0.35 T) hybrid MR-Linac. Materials and methods: A retrospective analysis was conducted enrolling 168 patients corresponding to 215 MR-CT pairs. After the exclusion criteria, 152 volumetric images were used to train the cycle-consistent generative adversarial network (CycleGAN) and 34 to test the sCT. Image similarity metrics and dose recalculation analysis were performed. Results: The generated sCT faithfully reproduced the original CT and the location of the air pockets agreed with the MR scan. The dose calculation did not require manual bulk density overrides and the mean deviations of the dose-volume histogram dosimetric points were within 1 % of the CT, without any outlier above 2 %. The mean gamma passing rates were above 99 % for the 2 %/ 2 mm analysis and no cases below 95 % were observed. Conclusions: This study presented the implementation of CycleGAN to perform sCT generation in the abdominal region for a low field hybrid MR-Linac. The sCT was shown to correctly allocate the electron density for the mobile air pockets and the dosimetric analysis demonstrated the potential for future implementation of MR-only radiotherapy in the abdomen.ISSN:2405-631

    Patient-specific quality assurance strategies for synthetic computed tomography in magnetic resonance-only radiotherapy of the abdomen

    No full text
    Background and purpose: The superior tissue contrast of magnetic resonance (MR) compared to computed tomography (CT) led to an increasing interest towards MR-only radiotherapy. For the latter, the dose calculation should be performed on a synthetic CT (sCT). Patient-specific quality assurance (PSQA) methods have not been established yet and this study aimed to assess several software-based solutions. Materials and methods: A retrospective study was performed on 20 patients treated at an MR-Linac, which were selected to evenly cover four subcategories: (i) standard, (ii) air pockets, (iii) lung and (iv) implant cases. The neural network (NN) CycleGAN was adopted to generate a reference sCT, which was then compared to four PSQA methods: (A) water override of body, (B) five tissue classes with bulk densities, (C) sCT generated by a separate NN (pix2pix) and (D) deformed CT. Results: The evaluation of the dose endpoints demonstrated that while all methods A-D provided statistically equivalent results (p = 0.05) within the 2% level for the standard cases (i), only the methods C-D guaranteed the same result over the whole cohort. The bulk densities override was shown to be a valuable method in absence of lung tissue within the beam path. Conclusion: The observations of this study suggested that the use of an additional sCT generated by a separate NN was an appropriate tool to perform PSQA of a sCT in an MR-only workflow at an MR-Linac. The time and dose endpoints requirements were respected, namely within 10 min and 2%
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