Rapid estimation of patient‐specific organ doses using a deep learning network

Author:

Myronakis Marios1,Stratakis John12,Damilakis John12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medical Physics School of Medicine University of Crete Iraklion Greece

2. Medical Physics Department University Hospital of Crete Iraklion Greece

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPatient‐specific organ‐dose estimation in diagnostic CT examinations can provide useful insights on individualized secondary cancer risks, protocol optimization, and patient management. Current dose estimation techniques mainly rely on time‐consuming Monte Carlo methods or/and generalized anthropomorphic phantoms.PurposeWe proposed a proof‐of‐concept rapid workflow based on deep learning networks to estimate organ doses for individuals following thorax Computed Tomography (CT) examinations.MethodsCT scan data from 95 individuals undergoing thorax CT examinations were used. Monte Carlo simulations were performed and three‐dimensional (3D) dose distributions for each patient were obtained. A fully connected sequential deep learning network model was constructed and trained for each organ considered in this study. Water‐equivalent diameter (WED), scan length, and tube current were the independent variables. Organ doses for heart, lungs, esophagus, and bones were calculated from the Monte Carlo 3D distribution and used to train the deep learning networks. Organ dose predictions from each network were evaluated using an independent data set of 19 patients.ResultsThe trained networks provided organ dose predictions within a second. There was very good agreement between the deep learning network predictions and reference organ dose values calculated from Monte Carlo simulations. The average difference was −1.5% for heart, −1.6% for esophagus, −1.0% for lungs, and −0.4% for bones in the 95 patients dataset, and −5.1%, 4.3%, 0.9%, and 1.4% respectively in the 19 patients test dataset.ConclusionsThe proposed workflow demonstrated that patient‐specific organ‐doses can be estimated in nearly real‐time using deep learning networks. The workflow can be readily implemented and requires a small set of representative data for training.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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