Contouring in the optic plane improves the accuracy of computed tomography‐based segmentation of the optic pathway

Author:

Walther Eric1,Griffin Lynn2ORCID,Randall Elissa2,Sandmeyer Lynne1,Osinchuk Stephanie1,Sukut Sally1ORCID,Hansen Katherine3ORCID,Keyerleber Michele4,Lawrence Jessica5ORCID,Parker Sarah6,Mayer Monique1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, Western College of Veterinary Medicine University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon Saskatchewan Canada

2. Department of Environmental and Radiological Health Sciences Colorado State University Fort Collins Colorado USA

3. Surgical and Radiological Sciences, Davis Veterinary Medicine University of California Davis California USA

4. Tufts University Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine North Grafton Massachusetts USA

5. Department of Veterinary Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine University of Minnesota St. Paul Minnesota USA

6. Department of Large Animal Clinical Sciences, Western College of Veterinary Medicine University of Saskatchewan Saskatoon Saskatchewan Canada

Abstract

AbstractCanine optic pathway structures are often contoured on CT images, despite the difficulty of visualizing the optic pathway with CT using standard planes. The purpose of this prospective, analytical, diagnostic accuracy study was to examine the accuracy of optic pathway contouring by veterinary radiation oncologists (ROs) before and after training on optic plane contouring. Optic pathway contours used as the gold standard for comparison were created based on expert consensus from registered CT and MRI for eight dogs. Twenty‐one ROs contoured the optic pathway on CT using their preferred method, and again following atlas and video training demonstrating contouring on the optic plane. The Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) was used to assess contour accuracy. A multilevel mixed model with random effects to account for repeated measures was used to examine DSC differences. The median DSC (5th and 95th percentile) before and after training was 0.31 (0.06, 0.48) and 0.41 (0.18, 0.53), respectively. The mean DSC was significantly higher after training compared with before training (mean difference = 0.10; 95% CI, 0.08–0.12; P < 0.001) across all observers and patients. DSC values were comparable to those reported (0.4–0.5) for segmentation of the optic chiasm and nerves in human patients. Contour accuracy improved after training but remained low, potentially due to the small optic pathway volumes. When registered CT‐MRI images are not available, our study supports routine addition of an optic plane with specific window settings to improve segmentation accuracy in mesaticephalic dogs ≥11 kg.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Veterinary

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