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Evaluation of T2-Weighted MRI for Visualization and Sparing of Urethra with MR-Guided Radiation Therapy (MRgRT) On-Board MRI

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) has become a standard of care option for prostate cancer patients, utilizing large fractionated dose to shorten treatment times. However, genitourinary (GU) toxicity associated with urethral injury remains prevalent due to non-trivial urethr...

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Autores principales: Pham, Jonathan, Savjani, Ricky R., Gao, Yu, Cao, Minsong, Hu, Peng, Sheng, Ke, Low, Daniel A., Steinberg, Michael, Kishan, Amar U., Yang, Yingli
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8307202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34298777
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13143564
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author Pham, Jonathan
Savjani, Ricky R.
Gao, Yu
Cao, Minsong
Hu, Peng
Sheng, Ke
Low, Daniel A.
Steinberg, Michael
Kishan, Amar U.
Yang, Yingli
author_facet Pham, Jonathan
Savjani, Ricky R.
Gao, Yu
Cao, Minsong
Hu, Peng
Sheng, Ke
Low, Daniel A.
Steinberg, Michael
Kishan, Amar U.
Yang, Yingli
author_sort Pham, Jonathan
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) has become a standard of care option for prostate cancer patients, utilizing large fractionated dose to shorten treatment times. However, genitourinary (GU) toxicity associated with urethral injury remains prevalent due to non-trivial urethra delineation and sparing at treatment planning and treatment delivery. The aim of our study was to evaluate two optimized urethral MRI sequences (3D HASTE and 3D TSE) with a 0.35T MR-guided radiotherapy (MRgRT) system for urethral visibility and delineation. Among 11 prostate cancer patients, a radiation oncologist qualitatively scored MRgRT 3D HASTE as having the best urethra visibility, superior to CT, clinical MRgRT 3D bSSFP, MRgRT 3D TSE, and similar to diagnostic 3T (2D/3D) T2-weighetd MRI. Moreover, urethra contours from different imaging and clinical workflows demonstrated significant urethra localization variability. Optimized 3D MRgRT HASTE can provide urethral visualization and delineation within an MRgRT workflow for urethral sparing, avoiding cross-modality/system registration errors. ABSTRACT: Purpose: To evaluate urethral contours from two optimized urethral MRI sequences with an MR-guided radiotherapy system (MRgRT). Methods: Eleven prostate cancer patients were scanned on a MRgRT system using optimized urethral 3D HASTE and 3D TSE. A resident radiation oncologist contoured the prostatic urethra on the patients’ planning CT, diagnostic 3T T2w MRI, and both urethral MRIs. An attending radiation oncologist reviewed/edited the resident’s contours and additionally contoured the prostatic urethra on the clinical planning MRgRT MRI (bSSFP). For each image, the resident radiation oncologist, attending radiation oncologist, and a senior medical physicist qualitatively scored the prostatic urethra visibility. Using MRgRT 3D HASTE-based contouring workflow as baseline, prostatic urethra contours drawn on CT, diagnostic MRI, clinical bSSFP and 3D TSE were evaluated relative to the contour on 3D HASTE using 95th percentile Hausdorff distance (HD95), mean-distance-to-agreement (MDA), and DICE coefficient. Additionally, prostatic urethra contrast-to-noise-ratios (CNR) were calculated for all images. Results: For two out of three observers, the urethra visibility score for 3D HASTE was significantly higher than CT, and clinical bSSFP, but was not significantly different from diagnostic MRI. The mean HD95/MDA/DICE values were 11.35 ± 3.55 mm/5.77 ± 2.69 mm/0.07 ± 0.08 for CT, 7.62 ± 2.75 mm/3.83 ± 1.47 mm/0.12 ± 0.10 for CT + diagnostic MRI, 5.49 ± 2.32 mm/2.18 ± 1.19 mm/0.35 ± 0.19 for 3D TSE, and 6.34 ± 2.89 mm/2.65 ± 1.31 mm/0.21 ± 0.12 for clinical bSSFP. The CNR for 3D HASTE was significantly higher than CT, diagnostic MRI, and clinical bSSFP, but was not significantly different from 3D TSE. Conclusion: The urethra’s visibility scores showed optimized urethral MRgRT 3D HASTE was superior to the other tested methodologies. The prostatic urethra contours demonstrated significant variability from different imaging and workflows. Urethra contouring uncertainty introduced by cross-modality registration and sub-optimal imaging contrast may lead to significant treatment degradation when urethral sparing is implemented to minimize genitourinary toxicity.
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spelling pubmed-83072022021-07-25 Evaluation of T2-Weighted MRI for Visualization and Sparing of Urethra with MR-Guided Radiation Therapy (MRgRT) On-Board MRI Pham, Jonathan Savjani, Ricky R. Gao, Yu Cao, Minsong Hu, Peng Sheng, Ke Low, Daniel A. Steinberg, Michael Kishan, Amar U. Yang, Yingli Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Stereotactic body radiation therapy (SBRT) has become a standard of care option for prostate cancer patients, utilizing large fractionated dose to shorten treatment times. However, genitourinary (GU) toxicity associated with urethral injury remains prevalent due to non-trivial urethra delineation and sparing at treatment planning and treatment delivery. The aim of our study was to evaluate two optimized urethral MRI sequences (3D HASTE and 3D TSE) with a 0.35T MR-guided radiotherapy (MRgRT) system for urethral visibility and delineation. Among 11 prostate cancer patients, a radiation oncologist qualitatively scored MRgRT 3D HASTE as having the best urethra visibility, superior to CT, clinical MRgRT 3D bSSFP, MRgRT 3D TSE, and similar to diagnostic 3T (2D/3D) T2-weighetd MRI. Moreover, urethra contours from different imaging and clinical workflows demonstrated significant urethra localization variability. Optimized 3D MRgRT HASTE can provide urethral visualization and delineation within an MRgRT workflow for urethral sparing, avoiding cross-modality/system registration errors. ABSTRACT: Purpose: To evaluate urethral contours from two optimized urethral MRI sequences with an MR-guided radiotherapy system (MRgRT). Methods: Eleven prostate cancer patients were scanned on a MRgRT system using optimized urethral 3D HASTE and 3D TSE. A resident radiation oncologist contoured the prostatic urethra on the patients’ planning CT, diagnostic 3T T2w MRI, and both urethral MRIs. An attending radiation oncologist reviewed/edited the resident’s contours and additionally contoured the prostatic urethra on the clinical planning MRgRT MRI (bSSFP). For each image, the resident radiation oncologist, attending radiation oncologist, and a senior medical physicist qualitatively scored the prostatic urethra visibility. Using MRgRT 3D HASTE-based contouring workflow as baseline, prostatic urethra contours drawn on CT, diagnostic MRI, clinical bSSFP and 3D TSE were evaluated relative to the contour on 3D HASTE using 95th percentile Hausdorff distance (HD95), mean-distance-to-agreement (MDA), and DICE coefficient. Additionally, prostatic urethra contrast-to-noise-ratios (CNR) were calculated for all images. Results: For two out of three observers, the urethra visibility score for 3D HASTE was significantly higher than CT, and clinical bSSFP, but was not significantly different from diagnostic MRI. The mean HD95/MDA/DICE values were 11.35 ± 3.55 mm/5.77 ± 2.69 mm/0.07 ± 0.08 for CT, 7.62 ± 2.75 mm/3.83 ± 1.47 mm/0.12 ± 0.10 for CT + diagnostic MRI, 5.49 ± 2.32 mm/2.18 ± 1.19 mm/0.35 ± 0.19 for 3D TSE, and 6.34 ± 2.89 mm/2.65 ± 1.31 mm/0.21 ± 0.12 for clinical bSSFP. The CNR for 3D HASTE was significantly higher than CT, diagnostic MRI, and clinical bSSFP, but was not significantly different from 3D TSE. Conclusion: The urethra’s visibility scores showed optimized urethral MRgRT 3D HASTE was superior to the other tested methodologies. The prostatic urethra contours demonstrated significant variability from different imaging and workflows. Urethra contouring uncertainty introduced by cross-modality registration and sub-optimal imaging contrast may lead to significant treatment degradation when urethral sparing is implemented to minimize genitourinary toxicity. MDPI 2021-07-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8307202/ /pubmed/34298777 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13143564 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Pham, Jonathan
Savjani, Ricky R.
Gao, Yu
Cao, Minsong
Hu, Peng
Sheng, Ke
Low, Daniel A.
Steinberg, Michael
Kishan, Amar U.
Yang, Yingli
Evaluation of T2-Weighted MRI for Visualization and Sparing of Urethra with MR-Guided Radiation Therapy (MRgRT) On-Board MRI
title Evaluation of T2-Weighted MRI for Visualization and Sparing of Urethra with MR-Guided Radiation Therapy (MRgRT) On-Board MRI
title_full Evaluation of T2-Weighted MRI for Visualization and Sparing of Urethra with MR-Guided Radiation Therapy (MRgRT) On-Board MRI
title_fullStr Evaluation of T2-Weighted MRI for Visualization and Sparing of Urethra with MR-Guided Radiation Therapy (MRgRT) On-Board MRI
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of T2-Weighted MRI for Visualization and Sparing of Urethra with MR-Guided Radiation Therapy (MRgRT) On-Board MRI
title_short Evaluation of T2-Weighted MRI for Visualization and Sparing of Urethra with MR-Guided Radiation Therapy (MRgRT) On-Board MRI
title_sort evaluation of t2-weighted mri for visualization and sparing of urethra with mr-guided radiation therapy (mrgrt) on-board mri
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8307202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34298777
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers13143564
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