A multiple-image-based method to evaluate the performance of deformable image registration in the pelvis Journal Article


Authors: Saleh, Z.; Thor, M.; Apte, A. P.; Sharp, G.; Tang, X.; Veeraraghavan, H.; Muren, L.; Deasy, J.
Article Title: A multiple-image-based method to evaluate the performance of deformable image registration in the pelvis
Abstract: Deformable image registration (DIR) is essential for adaptive radiotherapy (RT) for tumor sites subject to motion, changes in tumor volume, as well as changes in patient normal anatomy due to weight loss. Several methods have been published to evaluate DIR-related uncertainties but they are not widely adopted. The aim of this study was, therefore, to evaluate intra-patient DIR for two highly deformable organs - the bladder and the rectum - in prostate cancer RT using a quantitative metric based on multiple image registration, the distance discordance metric (DDM). Voxel-by-voxel DIR uncertainties of the bladder and rectum were evaluated using DDM on weekly CT scans of 38 subjects previously treated with RT for prostate cancer (six scans/subject). The DDM was obtained from group-wise B-spline registration of each patient's collection of repeat CT scans. For each structure, registration uncertainties were derived from DDM-related metrics. In addition, five other quantitative measures, including inverse consistency error (ICE), transitivity error (TE), Dice similarity (DSC) and volume ratios between corresponding structures from pre- and post- registered images were computed and compared with the DDM. The DDM varied across subjects and structures; DDMmean of the bladder ranged from 2 to 13 mm and from 1 to 11 mm for the rectum. There was a high correlation between DDMmean of the bladder and the rectum (Pearson's correlation coefficient, R p = 0.62). The correlation between DDMmean and the volume ratios post-DIR was stronger (R p = 0.51; 0.68) than the correlation with the TE (bladder: R p = 0.46; rectum: R p = 0.47), or the ICE (bladder: R p = 0.34; rectum: R p = 0.37). There was a negative correlation between DSC and DDMmean of both the bladder (R p = -0.23) and the rectum (R p = -0.63). The DDM uncertainty metric indicated considerable DIR variability across subjects and structures. Our results show a stronger correlation with volume ratios and with the DSC using DDM compared to using ICE and TE. The DDM has the potential to quantitatively identify regions of large DIR uncertainties and consequently identify anatomical/scan outliers. The DDM can, thus, be applied to improve the adaptive RT process for tumor sites subject to motion. © 2016 Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine.
Keywords: radiotherapy; computerized tomography; tumors; urology; diseases; image registration; deformation; negative correlation; ice; correlation methods; adaptive radiotherapy; uncertainties; deformable image registration; distance discordance metric (ddm); inverse consistency errors; pearson's correlation coefficients; quantitative measures
Journal Title: Physics in Medicine and Biology
Volume: 61
Issue: 16
ISSN: 0031-9155
Publisher: IOP Publishing Ltd  
Date Published: 2016-08-21
Start Page: 6172
End Page: 6180
Language: English
DOI: 10.1088/0031-9155/61/16/6172
PROVIDER: scopus
PUBMED: 27469495
PMCID: PMC5063075
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Export Date: 3 October 2016 -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Joseph Owen Deasy
    493 Deasy
  2. Ziad Hasan Saleh
    46 Saleh
  3. Aditya Apte
    191 Apte
  4. Maria Elisabeth Thor
    136 Thor
  5. Xiaoli   Tang
    58 Tang