Comparison of prostate delineation on multimodality imaging for MR-guided radiotherapy.
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ICR Authors
Authors
Pathmanathan, AU
McNair, HA
Schmidt, MA
Brand, DH
Delacroix, L
Eccles, CL
Gordon, A
Herbert, T
van As, NJ
Huddart, RA
Tree, AC
McNair, HA
Schmidt, MA
Brand, DH
Delacroix, L
Eccles, CL
Gordon, A
Herbert, T
van As, NJ
Huddart, RA
Tree, AC
Document Type
Journal Article
Date
2019-03-01
Date Accepted
2018-12-18
Date Available
Abstract
OBJECTIVE:: With increasing incorporation of MRI in radiotherapy, we investigate two MRI sequences for prostate delineation in radiographer-led image guidance. METHODS:: Five therapeutic radiographers contoured the prostate individually on CT, T2 weighted (T2W) and T2* weighted (T2*W) imaging for 10 patients. Contours were analysed with Monaco ADMIRE (research v. 2.0) to assess interobserver variability and accuracy by comparison with a gold standard clinician contour. Observers recorded time taken for contouring and scored image quality and confidence in contouring. RESULTS:: There is good agreement when comparing radiographer contours to the gold-standard for all three imaging types with Dice similarity co-efficient 0.91-0.94, Cohen's κ 0.85-0.91, Hausdorff distance 4.6-7.6 mm and mean distance between contours 0.9-1.2 mm. In addition, there is good concordance between radiographers across all imaging modalities. Both T2W and T2*W MRI show reduced interobserver variability and improved accuracy compared to CT, this was statistically significant for T2*W imaging compared to CT across all four comparison metrics. Comparing MRI sequences reveals significantly reduced interobserver variability and significantly improved accuracy on T2*W compared to T2W MRI for DSC and Cohen's κ. Both MRI sequences scored significantly higher compared to CT for image quality and confidence in contouring, particularly T2*W. This was also reflected in the shorter time for contouring, measuring 15.4, 9.6 and 9.8 min for CT, T2W and T2*W MRI respectively. Conclusion: Therapeutic radiographer prostate contours are more accurate, show less interobserver variability and are more confidently and quickly outlined on MRI compared to CT, particularly using T2*W MRI. Advances in knowledge: Our work is relevant for MRI sequence choice and development of the roles of the interprofessional team in the advancement of MRI-guided radiotherapy.
Citation
The British journal of radiology, 2019, 92 (1095), pp. 20180948 - ?
Source Title
Publisher
BRITISH INST RADIOLOGY
ISSN
0007-1285
eISSN
1748-880X
Collections
Research Team
Clinical Academic Radiotherapy (Huddart)
Stereotactic and Precision Body Radiotherapy
Stereotactic and Precision Body Radiotherapy