Synthetic computed tomography for low-field magnetic resonance-only radiotherapy in head-and-neck cancer using residual vision transformers

Phys Imaging Radiat Oncol. 2023 Jul 8:27:100471. doi: 10.1016/j.phro.2023.100471. eCollection 2023 Jul.

Abstract

Background and purpose: Synthetic computed tomography (sCT) scans are necessary for dose calculation in magnetic resonance (MR)-only radiotherapy. While deep learning (DL) has shown remarkable performance in generating sCT scans from MR images, research has predominantly focused on high-field MR images. This study presents the first implementation of a DL model for sCT generation in head-and-neck (HN) cancer using low-field MR images. Specifically, the use of vision transformers (ViTs) was explored.

Materials and methods: The dataset consisted of 31 patients, resulting in 196 pairs of deformably-registered computed tomography (dCT) and MR scans. The latter were obtained using a balanced steady-state precession sequence on a 0.35T scanner. Residual ViTs were trained on 2D axial, sagittal, and coronal slices, respectively, and the final sCTs were generated by averaging the models' outputs. Different image similarity metrics, dose volume histogram (DVH) deviations, and gamma analyses were computed on the test set (n = 6). The overlap between auto-contours on sCT scans and manual contours on MR images was evaluated for different organs-at-risk using the Dice score.

Results: The median [range] value of the test mean absolute error was 57 [37-74] HU. DVH deviations were below 1% for all structures. The median gamma passing rates exceeded 94% in the 2%/2mm analysis (threshold = 90%). The median Dice scores were above 0.7 for all organs-at-risk.

Conclusions: The clinical applicability of DL-based sCT generation from low-field MR images in HN cancer was proved. High sCT-dCT similarity and dose metric accuracy were achieved, and sCT suitability for organs-at-risk auto-delineation was shown.