Improving synthetic CT accuracy by combining the benefits of multiple normalized preprocesses.

Researchers

Journal

Modalities

Models

Abstract

To investigate the effect of different normalization preprocesses in deep learning on the accuracy of different tissues in synthetic computed tomography (sCT) and to combine their advantages to improve the accuracy of all tissues.The cycle-consistent adversarial network (CycleGAN) model was used to generate sCT images from megavolt cone-beam CT (MVCBCT) images. In this study, 2639 head MVCBCT and CT image pairs from 203 patients were collected as a training set, and 249 image pairs from 29 patients were collected as a test set. We normalized the voxel values in images to 0 to 1 or -1 to 1, using two linear and five nonlinear normalization preprocessing methods to obtain seven data sets and compared the accuracy of different tissues in different sCT obtained from training these data. Finally, to combine the advantages of different normalization preprocessing methods, we obtained sCT_Blur by cropping, stitching, and smoothing (OpenCV’s cv2.medianBlur, kernel size 5) each group of sCTs and evaluated its image quality and accuracy of OARs.Different normalization preprocesses made sCT more accurate in different tissues. The proposed sCT_Blur took advantage of multiple normalization preprocessing methods, and all tissues are more accurate than the sCT obtained using a single conventional normalization method. Compared with other sCT images, the structural similarity of sCT_Blur versus CT was improved to 0.906 ± 0.019. The mean absolute errors of the CT numbers were reduced to 15.7 ± 4.1 HU, 23.2 ± 7.1 HU, 11.5 ± 4.1 HU, 212.8 ± 104.6 HU, 219.4 ± 35.1 HU, and 268.8 ± 88.8 HU for the oral cavity, parotid, spinal cord, cavity, mandible, and teeth, respectively.The proposed approach combined the advantages of several normalization preprocessing methods to improve the accuracy of all tissues in sCT images, which is promising for improving the accuracy of dose calculations based on CBCT images in adaptive radiotherapy.© 2023 The Authors. Journal of Applied Clinical Medical Physics published by Wiley Periodicals, LLC on behalf of The American Association of Physicists in Medicine.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *