English

Boosting radiotherapy dose calculation accuracy with deep learning

Medical Physics 2020-05-18 v2

Abstract

In radiotherapy, a trade-off exists between computational workload/speed and dose calculation accuracy. Calculation methods like pencil-beam convolution can be much faster than Monte-Carlo methods, but less accurate. The dose difference, mostly caused by inhomogeneities and electronic disequilibrium, is highly correlated with the dose distribution and the underlying anatomical tissue density. We hypothesize that a conversion scheme can be established to boost low-accuracy doses to high-accuracy, using intensity information obtained from computed tomography (CT) images. A deep learning-driven framework was developed to test the hypothesis by converting between two commercially-available dose calculation methods: AAA (anisotropic-analytic-algorithm) and AXB (Acuros XB).A hierarchically-dense U-Net model was developed to boost the accuracy of AAA dose towards the AXB level. The network contained multiple layers of varying feature sizes to learn their dose differences, in relationship to CT, both locally and globally. AAA and AXB doses were calculated in pairs for 120 lung radiotherapy plans covering various treatment techniques, beam energies, tumor locations, and dose levels.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2005.03065,
  title  = {Boosting radiotherapy dose calculation accuracy with deep learning},
  author = {Yixun Xing and Ph. D. and You Zhang and Ph. D. and Dan Nguyen and Ph. D. and Mu-Han Lin and Ph. D. and Weiguo Lu and Ph. D. and Steve Jiang and Ph. D},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2005.03065},
  year   = {2020}
}

Comments

Paper accepted

R2 v1 2026-06-23T15:21:53.816Z