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GPU-Based Software Platform for Efficient Image-Guided Adaptive Radiation Therapy

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S Park

S Park1*, W Plishker2 , A Robinson1 , G Zaki2 , R Shekhar2,3 , T McNutt1 , J Wong1 , J Lee1 , (1) Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, MD,(2) IGI Technologies Inc., College Park, MD, (3) Children's National Medical Center, Washington, D.C.

Presentations

TU-AB-303-8 (Tuesday, July 14, 2015) 7:30 AM - 9:30 AM Room: 303


Purpose: In this study, we develop an integrated software platform for adaptive radiation therapy (ART) that combines fast and accurate image registration, segmentation, and dose computation/accumulation methods.

Methods: The proposed system consists of three key components; 1) deformable image registration (DIR), 2) automatic segmentation, and 3) dose computation/accumulation. The computationally intensive modules including DIR and dose computation have been implemented on a graphics processing unit (GPU). All required patient-specific data including the planning CT (pCT) with contours, daily cone-beam CTs, and treatment plan are automatically queried and retrieved from their own databases. To improve the accuracy of DIR between pCT and CBCTs, we use the double force demons DIR algorithm in combination with iterative CBCT intensity correction by local intensity histogram matching. Segmentation of daily CBCT is then obtained by propagating contours from the pCT. Daily dose delivered to the patient is computed on the registered pCT by a GPU-accelerated superposition/convolution algorithm. Finally, computed daily doses are accumulated to show the total delivered dose to date.

Results: Since the accuracy of DIR critically affects the quality of the other processes, we first evaluated our DIR method on eight head-and-neck cancer cases and compared its performance. Normalized mutual-information (NMI) and normalized cross-correlation (NCC) computed as similarity measures, and our method produced overall NMI of 0.663 and NCC of 0.987, outperforming conventional methods by 3.8% and 1.9%, respectively. Experimental results show that our registration method is more consistent and roust than existing algorithms, and also computationally efficient. Computation time at each fraction took around one minute (30-50 seconds for registration and 15-25 seconds for dose computation).

Conclusion: We developed an integrated GPU-accelerated software platform that enables accurate and efficient DIR, auto-segmentation, and dose computation, thus supporting an efficient ART workflow.

Funding Support, Disclosures, and Conflict of Interest: This work was supported by NIH/NCI under grant R42CA137886.


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