2015
DOI: 10.1007/s00259-015-3239-7
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Impact of consensus contours from multiple PET segmentation methods on the accuracy of functional volume delineation

Abstract: This study showed that combining different PET segmentation methods by the use of a consensus algorithm offers robustness against the variable performance of individual segmentation methods and this approach would therefore be useful in radiation oncology. It might also be relevant for other scenarios such as the merging of expert recommendations in clinical routine and trials or the multiobserver generation of contours for standardization of automatic contouring.

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Cited by 37 publications
(37 citation statements)
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“…Within the learning category would also fall the recent approaches to account for a set or contours generated via multiple automatic methods, through averaging/consensus methods, statistical methods such as the “inverse–ROC (receiver operating characteristic)” approach, STAPLE (simultaneous truth and performance level estimation)‐derived methods, majority voting, or decision tree to generate a surrogate of truth. Most of these methods would need some type of “training” or preliminary determination of parameters for the particular type of lesions and may therefore avoid the limitations of the individual methods used.…”
Section: Description and Classification Of The Algorithmsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Within the learning category would also fall the recent approaches to account for a set or contours generated via multiple automatic methods, through averaging/consensus methods, statistical methods such as the “inverse–ROC (receiver operating characteristic)” approach, STAPLE (simultaneous truth and performance level estimation)‐derived methods, majority voting, or decision tree to generate a surrogate of truth. Most of these methods would need some type of “training” or preliminary determination of parameters for the particular type of lesions and may therefore avoid the limitations of the individual methods used.…”
Section: Description and Classification Of The Algorithmsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At present, there is not a sufficient amount of published data to give specific recommendations for each clinical site. The emerging consensus and decision tree based methods, however, provide a potential to provide adequate solution for each site if appropriately adapted and trained.…”
Section: Comparison Of the Pet‐as Algorithms Based On Current Publicamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In RT, PET image registration is used for the following purposes among others: (a) better tumor target definition; (b) propagation of contours from one image set to another; (c) adaptive therapy planning/dose painting to selectively increase dose to more PET‐avid target regions; and (d) incorporation of respiratory‐gated PET information in treatment planning . The reader is referred to AAPM Task Group 132 (TG‐132: Use of Image Registration and Fusion Algorithms and Techniques in Radiotherapy), which deals with the topic of image registration in RT.…”
Section: Current Usage Of [18f]fdg‐pet In Rtmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…43 The clinical assessment of the LU database (ten studies) resulted in a mean DSC of 0.70 and mean CE of 56.21%, compared with 0.41 and 112.86% 43 and 0.54 and 60.58% 34 (nine studies), respectively. Schaefer et al 3 evaluated consensus contours from different PET segmentation algorithms using clinical PET images and reported a mean DSC varying from 0.59 to 0.67.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At the present time, there is no consensus on the best performing algorithm that can be adopted as standard for all or a number of indications. [1][2][3] Previous studies have shown a large variability in terms of computational complexity and amount of user interaction required by the various image segmentation techniques. [4][5][6] Recent reviews of state-of-the-art PET image segmentation techniques indicate that there is no optimal solution for all types of clinical oncology indications with respect to accuracy, precision, and efficiency.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%