Back to Search Start Over

A technique for the deidentification of structural brain MR images.

Authors :
Bischoff-Grethe A
Ozyurt IB
Busa E
Quinn BT
Fennema-Notestine C
Clark CP
Morris S
Bondi MW
Jernigan TL
Dale AM
Brown GG
Fischl B
Source :
Human brain mapping [Hum Brain Mapp] 2007 Sep; Vol. 28 (9), pp. 892-903.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Due to the increasing need for subject privacy, the ability to deidentify structural MR images so that they do not provide full facial detail is desirable. A program was developed that uses models of nonbrain structures for removing potentially identifying facial features. When a novel image is presented, the optimal linear transform is computed for the input volume (Fischl et al. [2002]: Neuron 33:341-355; Fischl et al. [2004]: Neuroimage 23 (Suppl 1):S69-S84). A brain mask is constructed by forming the union of all voxels with nonzero probability of being brain and then morphologically dilated. All voxels outside the mask with a nonzero probability of being a facial feature are set to 0. The algorithm was applied to 342 datasets that included two different T1-weighted pulse sequences and four different diagnoses (depressed, Alzheimer's, and elderly and young control groups). Visual inspection showed none had brain tissue removed. In a detailed analysis of the impact of defacing on skull-stripping, 16 datasets were bias corrected with N3 (Sled et al. [1998]: IEEE Trans Med Imaging 17:87-97), defaced, and then skull-stripped using either a hybrid watershed algorithm (Ségonne et al. [2004]: Neuroimage 22:1060-1075, in FreeSurfer) or Brain Surface Extractor (Sandor and Leahy [1997]: IEEE Trans Med Imaging 16:41-54; Shattuck et al. [2001]: Neuroimage 13:856-876); defacing did not appreciably influence the outcome of skull-stripping. Results suggested that the automatic defacing algorithm is robust, efficiently removes nonbrain tissue, and does not unduly influence the outcome of the processing methods utilized; in some cases, skull-stripping was improved. Analyses support this algorithm as a viable method to allow data sharing with minimal data alteration within large-scale multisite projects.<br /> ((c) 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1065-9471
Volume :
28
Issue :
9
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Human brain mapping
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
17295313
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.20312