Image Reconstruction with B0 Inhomogeneity using a Deep Unrolled Network on an Open-bore MRI-Linac
Access status:
Open Access
Type
ArticleAuthor/s
Shan, ShanshanGao, Yang
Waddington, David
Chen, Hongli
Whelan, Brendan
Liu, Paul
Wang, Yaohui
Liu, Chunyi
Gan, Hongping
Gao, Mingyuan
Liu, Feng
Abstract
MRI-Linac systems require fast image reconstruction with high geometric fidelity to localize and track tumours for radiotherapy treatments. However, B0 field inhomogeneity distortions and slow MR acquisition potentially limit the quality of the image guidance and tumour treatments. ...
See moreMRI-Linac systems require fast image reconstruction with high geometric fidelity to localize and track tumours for radiotherapy treatments. However, B0 field inhomogeneity distortions and slow MR acquisition potentially limit the quality of the image guidance and tumour treatments. In this study, we develop an interpretable unrolled network, referred to as RebinNet, to reconstruct distortion-free images from B0 inhomogeneity-corrupted k-space for fast MRI-guided radiotherapy applications. RebinNet includes convolutional neural network (CNN) blocks to perform image regularizations and nonuniform fast Fourier Transform (NUFFT) modules to incorporate B0 inhomogeneity information. The RebinNet was trained on a publicly available MR dataset (3300 images) from eleven healthy volunteers for both fully sampled and subsampled acquisitions. 768 grid phantom and 12 human brain images acquired from an open-bore 1T MRI-Linac scanner were used to evaluate the performance of the proposed network. The RebinNet was compared with the conventional regularization algorithm and our recently developed UnUNet method in terms of root mean squared error (RMSE), structural similarity (SSIM), residual distortions, and computation time. Imaging results demonstrated that the RebinNet reconstructed images with lowest RMSE (<0.05) and highest SSIM (>0.92) at four-time acceleration for simulated brain images. The RebinNet preserved more image details and substantially increased the computational efficiency (3s, ten-fold faster) compared to the conventional regularization methods (30s), and had better generalization ability than the UnUNet method. The proposed RebinNet can achieve rapid image reconstruction and overcome the B0 inhomogeneity distortions simultaneously, which would facilitate accurate and fast image guidance in radiotherapy treatments.
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See moreMRI-Linac systems require fast image reconstruction with high geometric fidelity to localize and track tumours for radiotherapy treatments. However, B0 field inhomogeneity distortions and slow MR acquisition potentially limit the quality of the image guidance and tumour treatments. In this study, we develop an interpretable unrolled network, referred to as RebinNet, to reconstruct distortion-free images from B0 inhomogeneity-corrupted k-space for fast MRI-guided radiotherapy applications. RebinNet includes convolutional neural network (CNN) blocks to perform image regularizations and nonuniform fast Fourier Transform (NUFFT) modules to incorporate B0 inhomogeneity information. The RebinNet was trained on a publicly available MR dataset (3300 images) from eleven healthy volunteers for both fully sampled and subsampled acquisitions. 768 grid phantom and 12 human brain images acquired from an open-bore 1T MRI-Linac scanner were used to evaluate the performance of the proposed network. The RebinNet was compared with the conventional regularization algorithm and our recently developed UnUNet method in terms of root mean squared error (RMSE), structural similarity (SSIM), residual distortions, and computation time. Imaging results demonstrated that the RebinNet reconstructed images with lowest RMSE (<0.05) and highest SSIM (>0.92) at four-time acceleration for simulated brain images. The RebinNet preserved more image details and substantially increased the computational efficiency (3s, ten-fold faster) compared to the conventional regularization methods (30s), and had better generalization ability than the UnUNet method. The proposed RebinNet can achieve rapid image reconstruction and overcome the B0 inhomogeneity distortions simultaneously, which would facilitate accurate and fast image guidance in radiotherapy treatments.
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Date
2024Source title
IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON INSTRUMENTATION AND MEASUREMENTVolume
73Publisher
IEEELicence
OtherRights statement
© 2024 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes, creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.Faculty/School
Faculty of Medicine and HealthDepartment, Discipline or Centre
Image X InstituteShare