Reconstruction of three‐dimensional tomographic patient models for radiation dose modulation in CT from two scout views using deep learning
Background A tomographic patient model is essential for radiation dose modulation in x‐ray computed tomography (CT). Currently, two‐view scout images (also known as topograms) are used to estimate patient models with relatively uniform attenuation coefficients. These patient models do not account fo...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Medical physics (Lancaster) 2022-02, Vol.49 (2), p.901-916 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
A tomographic patient model is essential for radiation dose modulation in x‐ray computed tomography (CT). Currently, two‐view scout images (also known as topograms) are used to estimate patient models with relatively uniform attenuation coefficients. These patient models do not account for the detailed anatomical variations of human subjects, and thus, may limit the accuracy of intraview or organ‐specific dose modulations in emerging CT technologies.
Purpose
The purpose of this work was to show that 3D tomographic patient models can be generated from two‐view scout images using deep learning strategies, and the reconstructed 3D patient models indeed enable accurate prescriptions of fluence‐field modulated or organ‐specific dose delivery in the subsequent CT scans.
Methods
CT images and the corresponding two‐view scout images were retrospectively collected from 4214 individual CT exams. The collected data were curated for the training of a deep neural network architecture termed ScoutCT‐NET to generate 3D tomographic attenuation models from two‐view scout images. The trained network was validated using a cohort of 55 136 images from 212 individual patients. To evaluate the accuracy of the reconstructed 3D patient models, radiation delivery plans were generated using ScoutCT‐NET 3D patient models and compared with plans prescribed based on true CT images (gold standard) for both fluence‐field‐modulated CT and organ‐specific CT. Radiation dose distributions were estimated using Monte Carlo simulations and were quantitatively evaluated using the Gamma analysis method. Modulated dose profiles were compared against state‐of‐the‐art tube current modulation schemes. Impacts of ScoutCT‐NET patient model‐based dose modulation schemes on universal‐purpose CT acquisitions and organ‐specific acquisitions were also compared in terms of overall image appearance, noise magnitude, and noise uniformity.
Results
The results demonstrate that (1) The end‐to‐end trained ScoutCT‐NET can be used to generate 3D patient attenuation models and demonstrate empirical generalizability. (2) The 3D patient models can be used to accurately estimate the spatial distribution of radiation dose delivered by standard helical CTs prior to the actual CT acquisition; compared to the gold‐standard dose distribution, 95.0% of the voxels in the ScoutCT‐NET based dose maps have acceptable gamma values for 5 mm distance‐to‐agreement and 10% dose difference. (3) The 3D patient models also en |
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ISSN: | 0094-2405 2473-4209 2473-4209 |
DOI: | 10.1002/mp.15414 |