4.6 Article

Deep learning applications in automatic needle segmentation in ultrasound-guided prostate brachytherapy

Journal

MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume 47, Issue 9, Pages 3797-3805

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mp.14328

Keywords

brachytherapy; deep learning; HDR; prostate

Funding

  1. Varian research grant

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Purpose High-Dose-Rate (HDR) brachytherapy is one of the most effective ways to treat the prostate cancer, which is the second most common cancer in men worldwide. This treatment delivers highly conformal dose through the transperineal needle implants and is guided by a real time ultrasound (US) imaging system. Currently, the brachytherapy needles in the US images are manually segmented by physicists during the treatment, which is time consuming and error prone. In this study, we propose a set of deep learning-based algorithms to accurately segment the brachytherapy needles and locate the needle tips from the US images. Methods Two deep neural networks are developed to address this problem. First, a modified deep U-Net is used to segment the pixels belonging to the brachytherapy needles from the US images. Second, an additional VGG-16-based deep convolutional network is combined with the segmentation network to predict the locations of the needle tips. The networks are trained and evaluated on a clinical US images dataset with labeled needle trajectories collected in our hospital (Institutional Review Board approval (IRB 41755)). Results The evaluation results show that our method can accurately extract the trajectories of the needles with a resolution of 0.668 mm and 0.319 mm inxandydirection, respectively. 95.4% of thexdirection and 99.2% of theydirection have error <= 2 mm. Moreover, the position resolutions of the tips are 0.721, 0.369, and 1.877 mm inx,y, andzdirections, respectively, while 94.2%, 98.3%, and 67.5% of the data have error <= 2 mm. Conclusions This paper proposed a neural network-based algorithm to segment the brachytherapy needles from the US images and locate the needle tip. It can be used in the HDR brachytherapy to help improve the efficiency and quality of the treatments.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available