Program Information
Evaluation of RayStation Hybrid Deformable Image Registration for Accurate Contour Propagation in Adaptive Planning
Y Rong*, S Rao , M Daly , C Wright , S Benedict , T Yamamoto , University of California Davis Medical Center, Sacramento, CA
Presentations
SU-F-J-58 (Sunday, July 31, 2016) 3:00 PM - 6:00 PM Room: Exhibit Hall
Purpose:Adaptive radiotherapy requires complete new sets of regions of interests (ROIs) delineation on the mid-treatment CT images. This work aims at evaluating the accuracy of the RayStation hybrid deformable image registration (DIR) algorithm for its overall integrity and accuracy in contour propagation for adaptive planning.
Methods:The hybrid DIR is based on the combination of intensity-based algorithm and anatomical information provided by contours. Patients who received mid-treatment CT scans were identified for the study, including six lung patients (two mid-treatment CTs) and six head-and-neck (HN) patients (one mid-treatment CT). DIR-propagated ROIs were compared with physician-drawn ROIs for 8 ITVs and 7 critical organs (lungs, heart, esophagus, and etc.) for the lung patients, as well as 14 GTVs and 20 critical organs (mandible, eyes, parotids, and etc.) for the HN patients. Volume difference, center of mass (COM) difference, and Dice index were used for evaluation. Clinical-relevance of each propagated ROI was scored by two physicians, and correlated with the Dice index.
Results:For critical organs, good agreement (Dice>0.9) were seen on all 7 for lung patients and 13 out of 20 for HN patients, with the rest requiring minimal edits. For targets, COM differences were within 5 mm on average for all patients. For Lung, 5 out of 8 ITVs required minimal edits (Dice 0.8-0.9), with the rest 2 needed re-drawn due to their small volumes (<10 cc). However, the propagated HN GTVs resulted in relatively low Dice values (0.5-0.8) due to their small volumes (3-40 cc) and high variability, among which 2 required re-drawn due to new nodal target identified on the mid-treatment CT scans.
Conclusion:The hybrid DIR algorithm was found to be clinically useful and efficient for lung and HN patients, especially for propagated critical organ ROIs. It has potential to significantly improve the workflow in adaptive planning.
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