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Inverse-consistent rigid registration of CT and MR for MR-based planning and adaptive prostate radiation therapy

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Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation David Rivest-Hénault et al 2014 J. Phys.: Conf. Ser. 489 012039 DOI 10.1088/1742-6596/489/1/012039

1742-6596/489/1/012039

Abstract

MRI-alone treatment planning and adaptive MRI-based prostate radiation therapy are two promising techniques that could significantly increase the accuracy of the curative dose delivery processes while reducing the total radiation dose. State-of-the-art methods rely on the registration of a patient MRI with a MR-CT atlas for the estimation of pseudo-CT [5]. This atlas itself is generally created by registering many CT and MRI pairs. Most registration methods are not symmetric, but the order of the images influences the result [8]. The computed transformation is therefore biased, introducing unwanted variability. This work examines how much a symmetric algorithm improves the registration.

Methods: A robust symmetric registration algorithm is proposed that simultaneously optimises a half space transform and its inverse. During the registration process, the two input volumetric images are transformed to a common position in space, therefore minimising any computational bias. An asymmetrical implementation of the same algorithm was used for comparison purposes.

Results: Whole pelvis MRI and CT scans from 15 prostate patients were registered, as in the creation of MR-CT atlases. In each case, two registrations were performed, with different input image orders, and the transformation error quantified. Mean residuals of 0.63±0.26 mm (translation) and (8.7±7.3) × 10−-3 rad (rotation) were found for the asymmetrical implementation with corresponding values of 0.038±0.039 mm and (1.6 ± 1.3) × 10−-3 rad for the proposed symmetric algorithm, a substantial improvement.

Conclusions: The increased registration precision will enhance the generation of pseudo-CT from MRI for atlas based MR planning methods.

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10.1088/1742-6596/489/1/012039