A two-step method to improve image quality of CBCT with phantom-based supervised and patient-based unsupervised learning strategies.
Yuxiang LiuXinyuan ChenJi ZhuBining YangRan WeiRui XiongHong QuanYueping LiuJianrong DaiKuo MenPublished in: Physics in medicine and biology (2022)
Objective. In this study, we aimed to develop deep learning framework to improve cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) image quality for adaptive radiation therapy (ART) applications. Approach. Paired CBCT and planning CT images of 2 pelvic phantoms and 91 patients (15 patients for testing) diagnosed with prostate cancer were included in this study. First, well-matched images of rigid phantoms were used to train a U-net, which is the supervised learning strategy to reduce serious artifacts. Second, the phantom-trained U-net generated intermediate CT images from the patient CBCT images. Finally, a cycle-consistent generative adversarial network (CycleGAN) was trained with intermediate CT images and deformed planning CT images, which is the unsupervised learning strategy to learn the style of the patient images for further improvement. When testing or applying the trained model on patient CBCT images, the intermediate CT images were generated from the original CBCT image by U-net, and then the synthetic CT images were generated by the generator of CycleGAN with intermediate CT images as input. The performance was compared with conventional methods (U-net/CycleGAN alone trained with patient images) on the test set. Results. The proposed two-step method effectively improved the CBCT image quality to the level of CT scans. It outperformed conventional methods for region-of-interest contouring and HU calibration, which are important to ART applications. Compared with the U-net alone, it maintained the structure of CBCT. Compared with CycleGAN alone, our method improved the accuracy of CT number and effectively reduced the artifacts, making it more helpful for identifying the clinical target volume. Significance. This novel two-step method improves CBCT image quality by combining phantom-based supervised and patient-based unsupervised learning strategies. It has immense potential to be integrated into the ART workflow to improve radiotherapy accuracy.
Keyphrases
- image quality
- deep learning
- convolutional neural network
- computed tomography
- dual energy
- machine learning
- optical coherence tomography
- artificial intelligence
- radiation therapy
- prostate cancer
- case report
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- early stage
- ejection fraction
- cone beam computed tomography
- newly diagnosed
- positron emission tomography
- squamous cell carcinoma
- resistance training
- hiv infected
- risk assessment
- prognostic factors
- body composition
- electronic health record
- high speed