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Journal article

PSACNN: Pulse sequence adaptive fast whole brain segmentation

In Neuroimage 2019, Volume 199, pp. 553-569
From

Massachusetts General Hospital/Harvard Medical School1

Massachusetts General Hospital2

Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark3

Biomedical Engineering, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark4

Medical Image Computing, Biomedical Engineering, Department of Health Technology, Technical University of Denmark5

Visual Computing, Department of Applied Mathematics and Computer Science, Technical University of Denmark6

With the advent of convolutional neural networks (CNN), supervised learning methods are increasingly being used for whole brain segmentation. However, a large, manually annotated training dataset of labeled brain images required to train such supervised methods is frequently difficult to obtain or create.

In addition, existing training datasets are generally acquired with a homogeneous magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) acquisition protocol. CNNs trained on such datasets are unable to generalize on test data with different acquisition protocols. Modern neuroimaging studies and clinical trials are necessarily multi-center initiatives with a wide variety of acquisition protocols.

Despite stringent protocol harmonization practices, it is very difficult to standardize the gamut of MRI imaging parameters across scanners, field strengths, receive coils etc., that affect image contrast. In this paper we propose a CNN-based segmentation algorithm that, in addition to being highly accurate and fast, is also resilient to variation in the input acquisition.

Our approach relies on building approximate forward models of pulse sequences that produce a typical test image. For a given pulse sequence, we use its forward model to generate plausible, synthetic training examples that appear as if they were acquired in a scanner with that pulse sequence. Sampling over a wide variety of pulse sequences results in a wide variety of augmented training examples that help build an image contrast invariant model.

Our method trains a single CNN that can segment input MRI images with acquisition parameters as disparate as T1-weighted and T2-weighted contrasts with only T1-weighted training data. The segmentations generated are highly accurate with state-of-the-art results (overall Dice overlap=0.94), with a fast run time (≈ 45 s), and consistent across a wide range of acquisition protocols.

Language: English
Year: 2019
Pages: 553-569
ISSN: 10959572 and 10538119
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.05.033
ORCIDs: Van Leemput, Koen

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