Back to Search Start Over

An automatic contour propagation method to follow parotid gland deformation during head-and-neck cancer tomotherapy

Authors :
Elena Faggiano
Giovanna Rizzo
Italo Dell'Oca
Elisa Scalco
N. Di Muzio
E. Maggiulli
Claudio Fiorino
M. Cattaneo
Sara Broggi
Riccardo Calandrino
Faggiano, E
Fiorino, C
Scalco, E
Broggi, S
Cattaneo, M
Maggiulli, E
Dell'Oca, I
Di Muzio, N
Calandrino, R
Rizzo, G.
Rizzo, G
Source :
Physics in Medicine and Biology. 56:775-791
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2011.

Abstract

We developed an efficient technique to auto-propagate parotid gland contours from planning kVCT to daily MVCT images of head-and-neck cancer patients treated with helical tomotherapy. The method deformed a 3D surface mesh constructed from manual kVCT contours by B-spline free-form deformation to generate optimal and smooth contours. Deformation was calculated by elastic image registration between kVCT and MVCT images. Data from ten head-and-neck cancer patients were considered and manual contours by three observers were included in both kVCT and MVCT images. A preliminary inter-observer variability analysis demonstrated the importance of contour propagation in tomotherapy application: a high variability was reported in MVCT parotid volume estimation (p = 0.0176, ANOVA test) and a larger uncertainty of MVCT contouring compared with kVCT was demonstrated by DICE and volume variability indices (Wilcoxon signed rank test, p < 10-4 for both indices). The performance analysis of our method showed no significant differences between automatic and manual contours in terms of volumes (p > 0.05, in a multiple comparison Tukey test), center-of-mass distances (p = 0.3043, ANOVA test), DICE values (p = 0.1672, Wilcoxon signed rank test) and average and maximum symmetric distances (p = 0.2043, p = 0.8228 Wilcoxon signed rank tests). Results suggested that our contour propagation method could successfully substitute human contouring on MVCT images. © 2011 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.

Details

ISSN :
13616560 and 00319155
Volume :
56
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics in Medicine and Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9b06aba9153c1bd3888d5e1192aabe91
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1088/0031-9155/56/3/015