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CBCT-DRRs superior to CT-DRRs for target-tracking applications for pancreatic SBRT.

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Abstract

In current radiograph-based intra-fraction markerless target-tracking, digitally reconstructed radiographs (DRRs) from planning CTs (CT-DRRs) are often used to train deep learning models that extract information from the intra-fraction radiographs acquired during treatment. Traditional DRR algorithms were designed for patient alignment (i.e. bone matching) and may not replicate the radiographic image quality of intra-fraction radiographs at treatment. Hypothetically, generating DRRs from pre-treatment Cone-Beam CTs (CBCT-DRRs) with DRR algorithms incorporating physical modelling of on-board-imagers (OBIs) could improve the similarity between intra-fraction radiographs and DRRs by eliminating inter-fraction variation and reducing image-quality mismatches between radiographs and DRRs. In this study, we test the two hypotheses that intra-fraction radiographs are more similar to CBCT-DRRs than CT-DRRs, and that intra-fraction radiographs are more similar to DRRs from algorithms incorporating physical models of OBI components than DRRs from algorithms omitting these models.&#xD;&#xD;Main results: Intra-fraction radiographs were more similar to CBCT-DRRs than CT-DRRs for both metrics across all algorithms, with all p<0.007. Source-spectrum modelling improved radiograph-DRR similarity for both metrics, with all p<1E-6. OBI detector modelling and patient material modelling did not influence radiograph-DRR similarity for either metric.&#xD;&#xD;Significance: Generating DRRs from pre-treatment CBCT-DRRs is feasible, and incorporating CBCT-DRRs into markerless target-tracking methods may promote improved target-tracking accuracies. Incorporating source-spectrum modelling into a treatment planning system’s DRR algorithms may reinforce the safe treatment of cancer patients by aiding in patient alignment.© 2024 IOP Publishing Ltd.

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