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1.
Med Phys ; 49(3): 2014-2025, 2022 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34800301

RESUMO

PURPOSE: Compared to CONV-RT (with conventional dose rate), FLASH-RT (with ultra-high dose rate) can provide biological dose sparing for organs-at-risk (OARs) via the so-called FLASH effect, in addition to physical dose sparing. However, the FLASH effect only occurs, when both dose and dose rate meet certain minimum thresholds. This work will develop a simultaneous dose and dose rate optimization (SDDRO) method accounting for both FLASH dose and dose rate constraints during treatment planning for pencil-beam-scanning proton therapy. METHODS: SDDRO optimizes the FLASH effect (specific to FLASH-RT) as well as the dose distribution (similar to CONV-RT). The nonlinear dose rate constraint is linearized, and the reformulated optimization problem is efficiently solved via iterative convex relaxation powered by alternating direction method of multipliers. To resolve and quantify the generic tradeoff of FLASH-RT between FLASH and dose optimization, we propose the use of FLASH effective dose based on dose modifying factor (DMF) owing to the FLASH effect. RESULTS: FLASH-RT via transmission beams (TB) (IMPT-TB or SDDRO) and CONV-RT via Bragg peaks (BP) (IMPT-BP) were evaluated for clinical prostate, lung, head-and-neck (HN), and brain cases. Despite the use of TB, which is generally suboptimal to BP for normal tissue sparing, FLASH-RT via SDDRO considerably reduced FLASH effective dose for high-dose OAR adjacent to the target. For example, in the lung SBRT case, the max esophageal dose constraint 27 Gy was only met by SDDRO (24.8 Gy), compared to IMPT-BP (35.3 Gy) or IMPT-TB (36.6 Gy); in the brain SRS case, the brain constraint V12Gy≤15cc was also only met by SDDRO (13.7cc), compared to IMPT-BP (43.9cc) or IMPT-TB (18.4cc). In addition, SDDRO substantially improved the FLASH coverage from IMPT-TB, e.g., an increase from 37.2% to 67.1% for lung, from 39.1% to 58.3% for prostate, from 65.4% to 82.1% for HN, from 50.8% to 73.3% for the brain. CONCLUSIONS: Both FLASH dose and dose rate constraints are incorporated into SDDRO for FLASH-RT that jointly optimizes the FLASH effect and physical dose distribution. FLASH effective dose via FLASH DMF is introduced to reconcile the tradeoff between physical dose sparing and FLASH sparing, and quantify the net effective gain from CONV-RT to FLASH-RT.


Assuntos
Terapia com Prótons , Radioterapia de Intensidade Modulada , Humanos , Masculino , Órgãos em Risco , Terapia com Prótons/métodos , Dosagem Radioterapêutica , Planejamento da Radioterapia Assistida por Computador/métodos , Radioterapia de Intensidade Modulada/métodos
2.
Med Image Anal ; 68: 101930, 2021 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33378731

RESUMO

Indirect image registration is a promising technique to improve image reconstruction quality by providing a shape prior for the reconstruction task. In this paper, we propose a novel hybrid method that seeks to reconstruct high quality images from few measurements whilst requiring low computational cost. With this purpose, our framework intertwines indirect registration and reconstruction tasks is a single functional. It is based on two major novelties. Firstly, we introduce a model based on deep nets to solve the indirect registration problem, in which the inversion and registration mappings are recurrently connected through a fixed-point interaction based sparse optimisation. Secondly, we introduce specific inversion blocks, that use the explicit physical forward operator, to map the acquired measurements to the image reconstruction. We also introduce registration blocks based deep nets to predict the registration parameters and warp transformation accurately and efficiently. We demonstrate, through extensive numerical and visual experiments, that our framework outperforms significantly classic reconstruction schemes and other bi-task method; this in terms of both image quality and computational time. Finally, we show generalisation capabilities of our approach by demonstrating their performance on fast Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI), sparse view computed tomography (CT) and low dose CT with measurements much below the Nyquist limit.


Assuntos
Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X , Algoritmos , Humanos , Imageamento por Ressonância Magnética
3.
Medicine (Baltimore) ; 96(51): e8805, 2017 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29390415

RESUMO

OBJECTIVE: This meta-analysis aims to determine whether hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) and perioperative hyperglycemia are associated with the increased risk of periprosthetic joint infection following total knee and hip arthroplasty. METHODS: A systematic search is performed in Medline (1966-October 2017), PubMed (1966-October 2017), Embase (1980-October 2017), ScienceDirect (1985-October 2017), and the Cochrane Library. Only high-quality studies are selected. A meta-analysis is performed using Stata 11.0 software. RESULTS: Six retrospective studies including 26,901 patients meet the inclusion criteria. The present meta-analysis indicates that there are significant differences between groups in terms of perioperative random blood glucose level [weighted mean difference (WMD) = 2.365, 95% confidence interval (95% CI): 1.802-2.929, P = .000] and perioperative hemoglobin A1c level (WMD = 3.266, 95% CI: 2.858-3.674, P = .000). No significant difference is found regarding body mass index (BMI) condition between groups (WMD = 0.027, 95% CI: -0.487 to 0.541, P = .919). CONCLUSION: The present meta-analysis shows that high HbA1c and perioperative hyperglycemia are associated with a higher risk of periprosthetic joint infection following total joint arthroplasty. Screening of HbA1c and perioperative blood glucose is therefore an effective method to predict deep infection.


Assuntos
Artrite Infecciosa/diagnóstico , Artroplastia de Quadril , Artroplastia do Joelho , Hemoglobinas Glicadas/análise , Hiperglicemia/sangue , Infecções Relacionadas à Prótese/diagnóstico , Humanos , Assistência Perioperatória , Complicações Pós-Operatórias/diagnóstico , Valor Preditivo dos Testes
4.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 35(12): 2578-2586, 2016 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27392346

RESUMO

This work develops a material reconstruction method for spectral CT, namely Total Image Constrained Material Reconstruction (TICMR), to maximize the utility of projection data in terms of both spectral information and high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). This is motivated by the following fact: when viewed as a spectrally-integrated measurement, the projection data can be used to reconstruct a total image without spectral information, which however has a relatively high SNR; when viewed as a spectrally-resolved measurement, the projection data can be utilized to reconstruct the material composition, which however has a relatively low SNR. The material reconstruction synergizes material decomposition and image reconstruction, i.e., the direct reconstruction of material compositions instead of a two-step procedure that first reconstructs images and then decomposes images. For material reconstruction with high SNR, we propose TICMR with nonlocal total variation (NLTV) regularization. That is, first we reconstruct a total image using spectrally-integrated measurement without spectral binning, and build the NLTV weights from this image that characterize nonlocal image features; then the NLTV weights are incorporated into a NLTV-based iterative material reconstruction scheme using spectrally-binned projection data, so that these weights serve as a high-SNR reference to regularize material reconstruction. Note that the nonlocal property of NLTV is essential for material reconstruction, since material compositions may have significant local intensity variations although their structural information is often similar. In terms of solution algorithm, TICMR is formulated as an iterative reconstruction method with the NLTV regularization, in which the nonlocal divergence is utilized based on the adjoint relationship. The alternating direction method of multipliers is developed to solve this sparsity optimization problem. The proposed TICMR method was validated using both simulated and experimental data. In comparison with FBP and total-variation-based iterative method, TICMR had improved image quality, e.g., contrast-to-noise ratio and spatial resolution.


Assuntos
Processamento de Imagem Assistida por Computador/métodos , Tomografia Computadorizada por Raios X/métodos , Algoritmos , Mama/diagnóstico por imagem , Feminino , Humanos , Modelos Biológicos , Imagens de Fantasmas , Razão Sinal-Ruído
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