Introduction: In-room MRI is a promising image guidance strategy in external beam radiotherapy to acquire volumetric information for moving targets. However, limitations in spatio-temporal resolution led several authors to use 2D orthogonal images for guidance. The aim of this work is to present a method to concurrently compensate for non-rigid tumour motion and provide an approach for 3D reconstruction from 2D orthogonal cine-MRI slices for MRI-guided treatments.
Methods: Free-breathing sagittal/coronal interleaved 2D cine-MRI were acquired in addition to a pre-treatment 3D volume in two patients. We performed deformable image registration (DIR) between cine-MRI slices and corresponding slices in the pre-treatment 3D volume. Based on an extrapolation of the interleaved 2D motion fields, the 3D motion field was estimated and used to warp the pre-treatment volume. Due to the lack of a ground truth for patients, the method was validated on a digital 4D lung phantom.
Results: On the phantom, the 3D reconstruction method was able to compensate for tumour motion and compared favourably to the results of previously adopted strategies. The difference in the 3D motion fields between the phantom and the extrapolated motion was 0.4 ± 0.3 mm for tumour and 0.8 ± 1.5 mm for whole anatomy, demonstrating feasibility of performing a 3D volumetric reconstruction directly from 2D orthogonal cine-MRI slices. Application of the method to patient data confirmed the feasibility of utilizing this method in real world scenarios.
Conclusion: Preliminary results on phantom and patient cases confirm the feasibility of the proposed approach in an MRI-guided scenario, especially for non-rigid tumour motion compensation.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1754-9485.12713 | DOI Listing |
Front Oncol
June 2024
Department of Radiotherapy, The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust, London, United Kingdom.
Introduction: We aimed to establish if stereotactic body radiotherapy to the prostate can be delivered safely using reduced clinical target volume (CTV) to planning target volume (PTV) margins on the 1.5T MR-Linac (MRL) (Elekta, Stockholm, Sweden), in the absence of gating.
Methods: Cine images taken in 3 orthogonal planes during the delivery of prostate SBRT with 36.
Phys Med Biol
March 2024
Departments of Radiation Oncology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO,United States of America.
. Real-time MRgRT uses 2D-cine imaging for target tracking and motion evaluation. Rotation of gantry inducedoff-resonance, resulting in image artifacts and imaging isocenter-shift precluding MR-guided arc therapy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Phys
April 2024
Department of Radiation Oncology, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California, USA.
Background: Volumetric reconstruction of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from sparse samples is desirable for 3D motion tracking and promises to improve magnetic resonance (MR)-guided radiation treatment precision. Data-driven sparse MRI reconstruction, however, requires large-scale training datasets for prior learning, which is time-consuming and challenging to acquire in clinical settings.
Purpose: To investigate volumetric reconstruction of MRI from sparse samples of two orthogonal slices aided by sparse priors of two static 3D MRI through implicit neural representation (NeRP) learning, in support of 3D motion tracking during MR-guided radiotherapy.
Phys Med Biol
November 2023
Department of Radiation Oncology, LMU University Hospital, LMU Munich, Munich, Germany.
To experimentally validate a method to create continuous time-resolved estimated synthetic 4D-computed tomography datasets (tresCTs) based on orthogonal cine MRI data for lung cancer treatments at a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) guided linear accelerator (MR-linac).A breathing porcine lung phantom was scanned at a CT scanner and 0.35 T MR-linac.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMed Phys
May 2023
Department of Radiation Oncology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA.
Background: Real-time motion monitoring (RTMM) is necessary for accurate motion management of intrafraction motions during radiation therapy (RT).
Purpose: Building upon a previous study, this work develops and tests an improved RTMM technique based on real-time orthogonal cine magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) acquired during magnetic resonance-guided adaptive RT (MRgART) for abdominal tumors on MR-Linac.
Methods: A motion monitoring research package (MMRP) was developed and tested for RTMM based on template rigid registration between beam-on real-time orthogonal cine MRI and pre-beam daily reference 3D-MRI (baseline).
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