Radiation Oncology (Aug 2023)

Deep learning based automatic segmentation of organs-at-risk for 0.35 T MRgRT of lung tumors

  • Marvin F. Ribeiro,
  • Sebastian Marschner,
  • Maria Kawula,
  • Moritz Rabe,
  • Stefanie Corradini,
  • Claus Belka,
  • Marco Riboldi,
  • Guillaume Landry,
  • Christopher Kurz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13014-023-02330-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background and purpose Magnetic resonance imaging guided radiotherapy (MRgRT) offers treatment plan adaptation to the anatomy of the day. In the current MRgRT workflow, this requires the time consuming and repetitive task of manual delineation of organs-at-risk (OARs), which is also prone to inter- and intra-observer variability. Therefore, deep learning autosegmentation (DLAS) is becoming increasingly attractive. No investigation of its application to OARs in thoracic magnetic resonance images (MRIs) from MRgRT has been done so far. This study aimed to fill this gap. Materials and methods 122 planning MRIs from patients treated at a 0.35 T MR-Linac were retrospectively collected. Using an 80/19/23 (training/validation/test) split, individual 3D U-Nets for segmentation of the left lung, right lung, heart, aorta, spinal canal and esophagus were trained. These were compared to the clinically used contours based on Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) and Hausdorff distance (HD). They were also graded on their clinical usability by a radiation oncologist. Results Median DSC was 0.96, 0.96, 0.94, 0.90, 0.88 and 0.78 for left lung, right lung, heart, aorta, spinal canal and esophagus, respectively. Median 95th percentile values of the HD were 3.9, 5.3, 5.8, 3.0, 2.6 and 3.5 mm, respectively. The physician preferred the network generated contours over the clinical contours, deeming 85 out of 129 to not require any correction, 25 immediately usable for treatment planning, 15 requiring minor and 4 requiring major corrections. Conclusions We trained 3D U-Nets on clinical MRI planning data which produced accurate delineations in the thoracic region. DLAS contours were preferred over the clinical contours.

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