Abstract
Gross tumor volume (GTV) segmentation is a critical step in esophageal cancer radiotherapy treatment planning. Inconsistencies across oncologists and prohibitive labor costs motivate automated approaches for this task. However, leading approaches are only applied to radiotherapy computed tomography (RTCT) images taken prior to treatment. This limits the performance as RTCT suffers from low contrast between the esophagus, tumor, and surrounding tissues. In this paper, we aim to exploit both RTCT and positron emission tomography (PET) imaging modalities to facilitate more accurate GTV segmentation. By utilizing PET, we emulate medical professionals who frequently delineate GTV boundaries through observation of the RTCT images obtained after prescribing radiotherapy and PET/CT images acquired earlier for cancer staging. To take advantage of both modalities, we present a two-stream chained segmentation approach that effectively fuses the CT and PET modalities via early and late 3D deep-network-based fusion. Furthermore, to effect the fusion and segmentation we propose a simple yet effective progressive semantically nested network (PSNN) model that outperforms more complicated models. Extensive 5-fold cross-validation on 110 esophageal cancer patients, the largest analysis to date, demonstrates that both the proposed two-stream chained segmentation pipeline and the PSNN model can significantly improve the quantitative performance over the previous state-of-the-art work by 11 in absolute Dice score (DSC) (from (formula presented) to (formula presented)) and, at the same time, reducing the Hausdorff distance from 129\pm 73 mm to 47 \pm 56 mm.
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CITATION STYLE
Jin, D., Guo, D., Ho, T. Y., Harrison, A. P., Xiao, J., Tseng, C. kan, & Lu, L. (2019). Accurate Esophageal Gross Tumor Volume Segmentation in PET/CT Using Two-Stream Chained 3D Deep Network Fusion. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 11765 LNCS, pp. 182–191). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32245-8_21
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