Deep Esophageal Clinical Target Volume Delineation Using Encoded 3D Spatial Context of Tumors, Lymph Nodes, and Organs At Risk

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Abstract

Clinical target volume (CTV) delineation from radiotherapy computed tomography (RTCT) images is used to define the treatment areas containing the gross tumor volume (GTV) and/or sub-clinical malignant disease for radiotherapy (RT). High intra- and inter-user variability makes this a particularly difficult task for esophageal cancer. This motivates automated solutions, which is the aim of our work. Because CTV delineation is highly context-dependent—it must encompass the GTV and regional lymph nodes (LNs) while also avoiding excessive exposure to the organs at risk (OARs)—we formulate it as a deep contextual appearance-based problem using encoded spatial contexts of these anatomical structures. This allows the deep network to better learn from and emulate the margin- and appearance-based delineation performed by human physicians. Additionally, we develop domain-specific data augmentation to inject robustness to our system. Finally, we show that a simple 3D progressive holistically nested network (PHNN), which avoids computationally heavy decoding paths while still aggregating features at different levels of context, can outperform more complicated networks. Cross-validated experiments on a dataset of 135 esophageal cancer patients demonstrate that our encoded spatial context approach can produce concrete performance improvements, with an average Dice score of 83.9 ± 5.4 % and an average surface distance of 4.2±2.7mm, representing improvements of 3.8 % and 2.4mm, respectively, over the state-of-the-art approach.

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Jin, D., Guo, D., Ho, T. Y., Harrison, A. P., Xiao, J., Tseng, C. kan, & Lu, L. (2019). Deep Esophageal Clinical Target Volume Delineation Using Encoded 3D Spatial Context of Tumors, Lymph Nodes, and Organs At Risk. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 11769 LNCS, pp. 603–612). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-32226-7_67

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