ESTRO 2023 - Abstract Book

S84

Saturday 13 May

ESTRO 2023

While segmentation improves with dataset size, our results can inform decision of how many scans are required to yield a desired performance level. Training with more than 250 images yields little improvement. The ensemble technique significantly improves auto-segmentation performance of HN OARs, stabilising at ~100 scans. The proposed ensemble inference strategy demonstrates an effective technique to improve segmentation of rare and/or difficult OARs, where larger validated training datasets are difficult to obtain. [1] https://doi.org/10.1016/j.phro.2022.04.003 OC-0122 Deep Learning Segmentation of Cardiac Substructures in Radiotherapy Planning L. Nürnberg 1 , D. Bontempi 1 , K. Verhoeven 1 , H. Zeng 1 , R. Canters 1 , E. Hortal Quesada 2 , F.R. Giglioli 3 , U. Ricardi 4 , M. Levis 4 , D. De Ruysscher 1 , A. Traverso 1 1 GROW School for Oncology and Reproduction, Maastricht University Medical Centre+, Department of Radiation Oncology (Maastro), Maastricht, The Netherlands; 2 Maastricht University, Department of Data Science and Knowledge Engineering, Maastricht, The Netherlands; 3 A.O.U. Città della Salute e della Scienza di Torino, Medical Physics Unit, Turin, Italy; 4 University of Turin, Department of Oncology, Turin, Italy Purpose or Objective The radiosensitivity of the different substructures of the heart varies. Nevertheless, manual segmentation of these substructures in planning computed tomography (pCT) required for dose re-calculations is time-consuming and prone to inter- and intra-observer variability. In this study, we aim to develop a deep learning (DL) solution for segmenting the cardiac substructures in pCT. Materials and Methods A cohort of 180 lymphoma and lung cancer patients treated with radiotherapy (RT) was retrospectively collected and used. Left and right ventricles (LV, RV), left and right atria (LA, RA), right coronary artery (RCA), left anterior descending artery (LAD), and the circumflex branch of the left coronary artery (CFLX) were manually annotated. The training, validation, and testing split was 70%/15%/15%. We extracted 53 axial 149x149 slices for each patient, limited to the maximum cardiac border, and developed seven individual 2D U-Net models for each region of interest (ROI). We investigated the effect of heart masking by removing all CT data outside the heart contour and four different loss functions - binary cross-entropy loss (BCEL), binary Dice score loss (BDL), binary focal loss (BFL), and the combo loss (CL). We explored different thresholds (TH) for generating binary segmentation masks. We used the Surface Dice score (SDS) with 3 (5) mm tolerance for small (large) ROIs as an evaluation metric. Two radiation oncologists (RO) conducted a quality assessment for all the automatic annotations obtained on the test set. Each RO estimated the time spent on modifications, which we compared to the original delineation time. Results The average SDS for a test patient was (0.74 ± 0.21). The results per ROI were LV (0.88 ± 0.07), LA (0.88 ± 0.09), RA (0.87 ± 0.09), RV (0.83 ± 0.08), LAD (0.7 ± 0.16), CFLX (0.56 ± 0.27), RCA (0.48 ± 0.18). The best results were obtained when masking was applied. The influence of the loss function differed for each ROI. While BCE and BDS led to better results for the large ROIs (RV, LV, RA, LA), only the CL led to usable results for the small ones (RCA, LAD, CFLX). The selection of a lower TH led to better SDS for the RCA (p < 0.05) but caused over-contouring, as revealed by the RO assessment. 100% of large ROIs and 55% of small ROIs were rated acceptable by all the ROs. Disagreement between experts on the acceptance of a ROI was only found for the LAD, CFLX and RCA with 9%, 18% and 41%, respectively. Using the automatic annotations as prior could save ROs about 20 minutes per patient (> 50%).

Conclusion We trained a DL pipeline that delineates the LV, RV, LA, and RA with high clinical acceptance. We propose heart masking during preprocessing for all ROI and highlight the CL for smaller ones. Using our model, delineation times for all ROIs can be significantly reduced. We find that evaluation metrics cannot replace clinical evaluation, i.e., for LA, RA, and CFLX, we observe increasing mean SDS values for decreasing quality levels.

Proffered Papers: Tumour-specific innovations

OC-0123 A SIOPe survey for paediatric CBCT protocols for image-guided radiotherapy D. Østergaard 1 , A. Bryce-Atkinson 2 , G. Whitfield 3 , L.S.C. Davies 4 , M. van Herk 5 , M.C. Aznar 5 , M. Vestmø Maraldo 1 1 Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen University Hospital, Department of Oncology, Copenhagen, Denmark; 2 The University of Manchester, Division of Cancer Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, Manchester , United Kingdom; 3 The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Manchester, United Kingdom; 4 The Christie NHS Foundation Trust, Department of Radiotherapy , Manchester , United Kingdom; 5 The University of Manchester, Division of Cancer Sciences, Faculty of Biology, Medicine and Health, Manchester, United Kingdom

Purpose or Objective

Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online