Virtual Patient-Specific Quality Assurance of IMRT Using UNet plus plus : Classification, Gamma Passing Rates Prediction, and Dose Difference Prediction

The dose verification in radiotherapy quality assurance (QA) is time-consuming and places a heavy workload on medical physicists. To provide a clinical tool to perform patient specific QA accurately, the UNet++ is investigated to classify failed or pass fields (the GPR lower than 85% is considered &...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in oncology 2021-07, Vol.11, Article 700343
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Ying, Pi, Yifei, Ma, Kui, Miao, Xiaojuan, Fu, Sichao, Chen, Hua, Wang, Hao, Gu, Hengle, Shao, Yan, Duan, Yanhua, Feng, Aihui, Wang, Jiyong, Cai, Ruxin, Zhuo, Weihai, Xu, Zhiyong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The dose verification in radiotherapy quality assurance (QA) is time-consuming and places a heavy workload on medical physicists. To provide a clinical tool to perform patient specific QA accurately, the UNet++ is investigated to classify failed or pass fields (the GPR lower than 85% is considered "failed" while the GPR higher than 85% is considered "pass"), predict gamma passing rates (GPR) for different gamma criteria, and predict dose difference from virtual patient-specific quality assurance in radiotherapy. UNet++ was trained and validated with 473 fields and tested with 95 fields. All plans used Portal Dosimetry for dose verification pre-treatment. Planar dose distribution of each field was used as the input for UNet++, with QA classification results, gamma passing rates of different gamma criteria, and dose difference were used as the output. In the test set, the accuracy of the classification model was 95.79%. The mean absolute error (MAE) were 0.82, 0.88, 2.11, 2.52, and the root mean squared error (RMSE) were 1.38, 1.57, 3.33, 3.72 for 3%/3mm, 3%/2 mm, 2%/3 mm, 2%/2 mm, respectively. The trend and position of the predicted dose difference were consistent with the measured dose difference. In conclusion, the Virtual QA based on UNet++ can be used to classify the field passed or not, predict gamma pass rate for different gamma criteria, and predict dose difference. The results show that UNet++ based Virtual QA is promising in quality assurance for radiotherapy.
ISSN:2234-943X
2234-943X
DOI:10.3389/fonc.2021.700343