AI can jump-start radiation therapy for cancer patients

AI can jump-start radiation therapy for cancer patients
Dr. Mu-Han Lin, left, consults with Dr. Steve Jiang about a radiation treatment plan developed by artificial intelligence. Dr. Jiang's team trained four deep-learning models to instantly generate dosage plans and shorten the time patients must wait before starting radiation therapy. Credit: UTSW

Artificial intelligence can help cancer patients start their radiation therapy sooner—and thereby decrease the odds of the cancer spreading—by instantly translating complex clinical data into an optimal plan of attack.

Patients typically must wait several days to a week to begin therapy while doctors manually develop treatment plans. But new research from UT Southwestern shows how enhanced deep-learning models streamlined this process down to a fraction of a second.

"Some of these patients need therapy immediately, but doctors often have to tell them to go home and wait," says Steve Jiang, Ph.D., who directs UT Southwestern's Medical Artificial Intelligence and Automation (MAIA) Lab. "Achieving optimal treatment plans in near real time is important and part of our broader mission to use AI to improve all aspects of care."

Radiation therapy is a common form of cancer treatment that utilizes high radiation beams to destroy cancer cells and shrink tumors. Previous research shows that delaying this therapy by even a week can increase the chance of some cancers either recurring or spreading by 12-14 percent.

Such statistics motivated Jiang's team to explore methods of using AI to improve multiple facets of —from the initial dosage plans required before the treatment can begin to the dose recalculations that occur as the plan progresses.

Jiang says developing a sophisticated treatment plan can be a time-consuming and tedious process that involves careful review of the patient's imaging data and several phases of feedback within the medical team.

A new study from the MAIA Lab on dose prediction, published in Medical Physics, demonstrated AI's ability to produce optimal treatment plans within five-hundredths of a second after receiving for patients.

AI can jump-start radiation therapy for cancer patients
Scientists trained artificial intelligence to instantly generate 3D renderings of how best to distribute radiation therapy to cancer patients. The technology could allow patients to start treatment sooner, thereby decreasing the odds of the cancer spreading. Credit: UTSW

Researchers achieved this by feeding the data for 70 prostate into four deep-learning models. Through repetition, the AI learned to develop 3-D renderings of how best to distribute the radiation in each patient. Each accurately predicted the treatment plans developed by the medical team.

The study builds upon other MAIA research published in 2019 that focused on developing treatment plans for lung and head and neck cancer.

"Our AI can cut out much of the back and forth that happens between the doctor and the dosage planner," Jiang says. "This improves the efficiency dramatically."

A second new study by Jiang, also published in Medical Physics, shows how AI can quickly and accurately recalculate dosages before each radiation session, taking into account how the patient's anatomy may have changed since the last . A conventional, accurate recalculation sometimes requires patients to wait 10 minutes or more, in addition to the time needed to conduct anatomy imaging before each session.

Jiang's researchers developed an AI algorithm that combined two conventional models that had been used for dose calculation: a simple, fast model that lacked accuracy and a complex one that was accurate but required a much longer time, often about a half-hour.

The newly developed AI assessed the differences between the models—based on data from 70 prostate cancer patients—and learned how to utilize both speed and accuracy to generate calculations within one second.

UT Southwestern plans to use the new AI capabilities in clinical care after implementing a patient interface. Meanwhile, the MAIA Lab is developing deep-learning tools for several other purposes, including enhanced medical imaging and image processing, automated medical procedures, and improved disease diagnosis and treatment outcome prediction.

More information: Dan Nguyen et al. Incorporating human and learned domain knowledge into training deep neural networks: A differentiable dose‐volume histogram and adversarial inspired framework for generating Pareto optimal dose distributions in radiation therapy, Medical Physics (2019). DOI: 10.1002/mp.13955

Citation: AI can jump-start radiation therapy for cancer patients (2020, January 28) retrieved 28 March 2024 from https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-01-ai-jump-start-therapy-cancer-patients.html
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