4.7 Article

Fast Deformable Image Registration for Real- Time Target Tracking During Radiation Therapy Using Cine MRI and Deep Learning

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ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2022.09.086

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We developed a deep learning model for fast deformable image registration using 2-dimensional sagittal cine MRI acquired during radiation therapy, and compared it with conventional image registration methods. Through various evaluation metrics, we demonstrated the potential of our model for real-time target tracking.
Purpose: We developed a deep learning (DL) model for fast deformable image registration using 2-dimensional sagittal cine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) acquired during radiation therapy and evaluated its potential for real-time target tracking compared with conventional image registration methods.Methods and Materials: Our DL model uses a pair of cine MRI images as input and provides a motion vector field (MVF) as output. The MVF is then applied to align the input images. A retrospective study was conducted to train and evaluate our model using cine MRI data from patients undergoing treatment for abdominal and thoracic tumors. For each treatment frac-tion, MR-linear accelerator delivery log files, tracking videos, and cine image files were analyzed. Individual MRI frames were temporally sampled to construct a large set of image registration pairs used to evaluate multiple methods. The DL model was optimized using 5-fold cross validation, and model outputs (transformed images and MVFs) using test set images were saved for comparison with 3 conventional registration methods (affine, b-spline, and demons). Evaluation metrics were 3-fold: (1) registration error, (2) MVF stability (both spatial and temporal), and (3) average computation time.Results: We analyzed >21 hours of cine MRI (>629,000 frames) acquired during 86 treatment fractions from 21 patients. In a test set of 10,320 image registration pairs, DL registration outperformed conventional methods in both registration error (affine, b-spline, demons, DL; root mean square error: 0.067, 0.040, 0.036, 0.032; paired t test demons vs DL: t[20] = 4.2, P < .001) and computation time per frame (51, 1150, 4583, 8 ms). Among deformable methods, spatial stability of resulting MVFs was comparable; however, the DL model had significantly improved temporal consistency.Conclusions: DL-based image registration can leverage large-scale MR cine data sets to outperform conventional registration methods and is a promising solution for real-time deformable motion estimation in radiation therapy.

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