Publications by authors named "Adrien Boue-Rafle"

Background And Purpose: Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-to-computed tomography (CT) synthesis is essential in MRI-only radiotherapy workflows, particularly through deep learning techniques known for their accuracy. However, current supervised methods are limited to specific center's learnings and depend on registration precision. The aim of this study was to evaluate the accuracy of unsupervised and supervised approaches in the context of prostate MRI-to-CT generation for radiotherapy dose calculation.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Introduction: For radiotherapy based solely on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), generating synthetic computed tomography scans (sCT) from MRI is essential for dose calculation. The use of deep learning (DL) methods to generate sCT from MRI has shown encouraging results if the MRI images used for training the deep learning network and the MRI images for sCT generation come from the same MRI device. The objective of this study was to create and evaluate a generic DL model capable of generating sCTs from various MRI devices for prostate radiotherapy.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Addressing the need for accurate dose calculation in MRI-only radiotherapy, the generation of synthetic Computed Tomography (sCT) from MRI has emerged. Deep learning (DL) techniques, have shown promising results in achieving high sCT accuracies. However, existing sCT synthesis methods are often center-specific, posing a challenge to their generalizability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background And Purpose: The intraprostatic urethra is an organ at risk in prostate cancer radiotherapy, but its segmentation in computed tomography (CT) is challenging. This work sought to: i) propose an automatic pipeline for intraprostatic urethra segmentation in CT, ii) analyze the dose to the urethra, iii) compare the predictions to magnetic resonance (MR) contours.

Materials And Methods: First, we trained Deep Learning networks to segment the rectum, bladder, prostate, and seminal vesicles.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The quality assurance of synthetic CT (sCT) is crucial for safe clinical transfer to an MRI-only radiotherapy planning workflow. The aim of this work is to propose a population-based process assessing local errors in the generation of sCTs and their impact on dose distribution. For the analysis to be anatomically meaningful, a customized interpatient registration method brought the population data to the same coordinate system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF