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Deep Learning for Synthetic CT from Bone MRI in the Head and Neck.

Authors :
Bambach S
Ho ML
Source :
AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology [AJNR Am J Neuroradiol] 2022 Aug; Vol. 43 (8), pp. 1172-1179.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Background and Purpose: Bone MR imaging techniques enable visualization of cortical bone without the need for ionizing radiation. Automated conversion of bone MR imaging to synthetic CT is highly desirable for downstream image processing and eventual clinical adoption. Given the complex anatomy and pathology of the head and neck, deep learning models are ideally suited for learning such mapping.<br />Materials and Methods: This was a retrospective study of 39 pediatric and adult patients with bone MR imaging and CT examinations of the head and neck. For each patient, MR imaging and CT data sets were spatially coregistered using multiple-point affine transformation. Paired MR imaging and CT slices were generated for model training, using 4-fold cross-validation. We trained 3 different encoder-decoder models: Light_U-Net (2 million parameters) and VGG-16 U-Net (29 million parameters) without and with transfer learning. Loss functions included mean absolute error, mean squared error, and a weighted average. Performance metrics included Pearson R , mean absolute error, mean squared error, bone precision, and bone recall. We investigated model generalizability by training and validating across different conditions.<br />Results: The Light_U-Net architecture quantitatively outperformed VGG-16 models. Mean absolute error loss resulted in higher bone precision, while mean squared error yielded higher bone recall. Performance metrics decreased when using training data captured only in a different environment but increased when local training data were augmented with those from different hospitals, vendors, or MR imaging techniques.<br />Conclusions: We have optimized a robust deep learning model for conversion of bone MR imaging to synthetic CT, which shows good performance and generalizability when trained on different hospitals, vendors, and MR imaging techniques. This approach shows promise for facilitating downstream image processing and adoption into clinical practice.<br /> (© 2022 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1936-959X
Volume :
43
Issue :
8
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
AJNR. American journal of neuroradiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36920777
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A7588