Super-resolution T2-weighted 4D MRI for image guided radiotherapy

Radiother Oncol. 2018 Dec;129(3):486-493. doi: 10.1016/j.radonc.2018.05.015. Epub 2018 Jun 2.

Abstract

Background and purpose: The superior soft-tissue contrast of 4D-T2w MRI motivates its use for delineation in radiotherapy treatment planning. We address current limitations of slice-selective implementations, including thick slices and artefacts originating from data incompleteness and variable breathing.

Materials and methods: A method was developed to calculate midposition and 4D-T2w images of the whole thorax from continuously acquired axial and sagittal 2D-T2w MRI (1.5 × 1.5 × 5.0 mm3). The method employed image-derived respiratory surrogates, deformable image registration and super-resolution reconstruction. Volunteer imaging and a respiratory motion phantom were used for validation. The minimum number of dynamic acquisitions needed to calculate a representative midposition image was investigated by retrospectively subsampling the data (10-30 dynamic acquisitions).

Results: Super-resolution 4D-T2w MRI (1.0 × 1.0 × 1.0 mm3, 8 respiratory phases) did not suffer from data incompleteness and exhibited reduced stitching artefacts compared to sorted multi-slice MRI. Experiments using a respiratory motion phantom and colour-intensity projection images demonstrated a minor underestimation of the motion range. Midposition diaphragm differences in retrospectively subsampled acquisitions were <1.1 mm compared to the full dataset. 10 dynamic acquisitions were found sufficient to generate midposition MRI.

Conclusions: A motion-modelling and super-resolution method was developed to calculate high quality 4D/midposition T2w MRI from orthogonal 2D-T2w MRI.

Keywords: 4D MRI; Motion vector field; Radiotherapy treatment planning; Super resolution; T2w 4D MRI.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Imaging, Three-Dimensional / methods
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Interventional / methods*
  • Phantoms, Imaging
  • Radiotherapy, Image-Guided / methods*
  • Retrospective Studies