4.5 Article

Slice-stacking T2-weighted MRI for fast determination of internal target volume for liver tumor

Journal

QUANTITATIVE IMAGING IN MEDICINE AND SURGERY
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages 32-42

Publisher

AME PUBL CO
DOI: 10.21037/qims-20-41

Keywords

Internal target volume (ITV); liver cancer; slice-stacking; MRI; maximum intensity projection (MIP)

Funding

  1. NIH [R21 CA165384, R01 CA226899, GRF 151021/18M, GRF 151022/19M, HMRF 06173276]

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The study investigates the feasibility of using slice-stacking MRI technique to generate MIP images for determining ITV. Results show that it is feasible to generate a fast clinically acceptable ITV using this method.
Background: To investigate the feasibility of generating maximum intensity projection (MIP) images to determine internal target volume (ITV) using slice-stacking MRI (SS-MRI) technique Methods: Slice-stacking is a technique which applies a multi-slice MRI acquisition to generate a 3D MIP for ITV contouring, without reconstructing 4D-MRI. 4D digital extended cardiac-torso (XCAT) phantom was used to generate MIP images with sequential 2D HASTE sequence, with different tumor diameters (10, 30 and 50 mm) and with simulated regular and irregular (patient) breathing motions. A reference MIP was generated using all acquisition images. Consecutive repetitions were then used to generate MIP to analyze the relationship between Dice's similarity coefficient (DSC) and the number of repetitions, and the relationship between the relative ITV volume difference and the number of repetitions. Images from XCAT phantom and from three hepatic carcinoma patients were collected in this study to demonstrate the feasibility of this technique. Results: For both regular and irregular breathing motion, the average DSC of ITV is 10% (approximately 0.15 cm(3)) when using 5 repeated scanning images to reconstruct MIP for tumor diameter of 10 mm. As tumor diameter increases, the DSC of ITV is 5% for regular breathing motion, and the DSC of ITV is 0.97 and the relative ITV volume difference is <5.5% for irregular breathing motion when using 5 repeated scanning images to reconstruct MIP. In patient image study, the mean relative ITV volume difference is <3% and the mean DSC is 0.99 when using 5 repeated scanning images to reconstruct MIP. Conclusions: The number of scans required to generate tumor ITV for slice-stacking method (5-7 repetition) is 3-4 times less than that of 4D-MRI (15-20 repetitions). It is feasible to generate a fast clinically acceptable ITV using slice-stacking method with sequential 2D MR images.

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