Saskia Laura Corry Damen, Astrid L H M W van Lier, Cornel Zachiu, Bas W Raaymakers
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The small bowel is one of the most radiosensitive organs-at-risk during radiotherapy in the pelvis. This is further complicated due to anatomical and physiological motion. Thus, its accurate tracking becomes of particular importance during therapy delivery, to obtain better dose-toxicity relations and/or to perform safe adaptive treatments. The aim of this work is to simultaneously optimize the MR imaging sequence and motion estimation solution towards improved small bowel tracking precision during radiotherapy delivery. 

Materials and methods
An MRI sequence was optimized, to adhere to the respiratory and peristaltic motion frequencies, by assesing the performance of an image registration algorithm on data acquired on volunteers and patients. In terms of tracking, three registration algorithms, previously-employed in the scope of image-guided radiotherapy, were investigated. 
The optimized scan was acquired for 7.5 min., in 18 patients and for 15 min., in 10 volunteers at a 1.5T MRL (Unity, Elekta AB). The tracking precision was evaluated and validated by means of three different quality assurance criteria: Structural Similarity Index Metric (SSIM), Inverse Consistency (IC) and Absolute Intensity Difference (AID). 

Results
The optimal sequence was a balanced Fast Field Echo (FFE), which acquired a 3D volume of the abdomen, with a dynamic scan time of 1.8 seconds. An optical flow algorithm performed best and which was able to resolve most of the motion. This was shown by mean IC values of < 1 mm and a mean SSIM >0.9 for the majority of the cases.
A strong positive correlation (p<0.001) between the registration performance and visceral fat percentage was found, where a higher visceral fat percentage gave a better registration due to the better image contrast. 

Conclusions
A method for simultaneous optimization of imaging and tracking was presented, which derived an imaging and registration procedure for accurate small bowel tracking on the MR-Linac.</p>","PeriodicalId":20185,"journal":{"name":"Physics in medicine and biology","volume":" ","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":3.3000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Physics in medicine and biology","FirstCategoryId":"5","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-6560/adbbac","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background and purpose
The small bowel is one of the most radiosensitive organs-at-risk during radiotherapy in the pelvis. This is further complicated due to anatomical and physiological motion. Thus, its accurate tracking becomes of particular importance during therapy delivery, to obtain better dose-toxicity relations and/or to perform safe adaptive treatments. The aim of this work is to simultaneously optimize the MR imaging sequence and motion estimation solution towards improved small bowel tracking precision during radiotherapy delivery.
Materials and methods
An MRI sequence was optimized, to adhere to the respiratory and peristaltic motion frequencies, by assesing the performance of an image registration algorithm on data acquired on volunteers and patients. In terms of tracking, three registration algorithms, previously-employed in the scope of image-guided radiotherapy, were investigated.
The optimized scan was acquired for 7.5 min., in 18 patients and for 15 min., in 10 volunteers at a 1.5T MRL (Unity, Elekta AB). The tracking precision was evaluated and validated by means of three different quality assurance criteria: Structural Similarity Index Metric (SSIM), Inverse Consistency (IC) and Absolute Intensity Difference (AID).
Results
The optimal sequence was a balanced Fast Field Echo (FFE), which acquired a 3D volume of the abdomen, with a dynamic scan time of 1.8 seconds. An optical flow algorithm performed best and which was able to resolve most of the motion. This was shown by mean IC values of < 1 mm and a mean SSIM >0.9 for the majority of the cases.
A strong positive correlation (p<0.001) between the registration performance and visceral fat percentage was found, where a higher visceral fat percentage gave a better registration due to the better image contrast.
Conclusions
A method for simultaneous optimization of imaging and tracking was presented, which derived an imaging and registration procedure for accurate small bowel tracking on the MR-Linac.
期刊介绍:
The development and application of theoretical, computational and experimental physics to medicine, physiology and biology. Topics covered are: therapy physics (including ionizing and non-ionizing radiation); biomedical imaging (e.g. x-ray, magnetic resonance, ultrasound, optical and nuclear imaging); image-guided interventions; image reconstruction and analysis (including kinetic modelling); artificial intelligence in biomedical physics and analysis; nanoparticles in imaging and therapy; radiobiology; radiation protection and patient dose monitoring; radiation dosimetry