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Fully Automated Segmentation of Pulmonary Fibrosis Using Different Software Tools

Authors :
Oliver Weinheimer
Hans-Ulrich Kauczor
Tobias Norajitra
Athanasios Giannakis
Claus Peter Heussel
Julien Dinkel
Gudula Heussel
Monika Eichinger
Michael Kreuter
Julia Ley-Zaporozhan
Sebastian Ley
Lars Kehler
Claudia Ganter
Klaus H. Maier-Hein
Csilla Van Lunteren
Source :
Respiration. 100:580-587
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
S. Karger AG, 2021.

Abstract

Objective: Evaluation of software tools for segmentation, quantification, and characterization of fibrotic pulmonary parenchyma changes will strengthen the role of CT as biomarkers of disease extent, evolution, and response to therapy in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) patients. Methods: 418 nonenhanced thin-section MDCTs of 127 IPF patients and 78 MDCTs of 78 healthy individuals were analyzed through 3 fully automated, completely different software tools: YACTA, LUFIT, and IMBIO. The agreement between YACTA and LUFIT on segmented lung volume and 80th (reflecting fibrosis) and 40th (reflecting ground-glass opacity) percentile of the lung density histogram was analyzed using Bland-Altman plots. The fibrosis and ground-glass opacity segmented by IMBIO (lung texture analysis software tool) were included in specific regression analyses. Results: In the IPF-group, LUFIT outperformed YACTA by segmenting more lung volume (mean difference 242 mL, 95% limits of agreement −54 to 539 mL), as well as quantifying higher 80th (76 HU, −6 to 158 HU) and 40th percentiles (9 HU, −73 to 90 HU). No relevant differences were revealed in the control group. The 80th/40th percentile as quantified by LUFIT correlated positively with the percentage of fibrosis/ground-glass opacity calculated by IMBIO (r = 0.78/r = 0.92). Conclusions: In terms of segmentation of pulmonary fibrosis, LUFIT as a shape model-based segmentation software tool is superior to the threshold-based YACTA, tool, since the density of (severe) fibrosis is similar to that of the surrounding soft tissues. Therefore, shape modeling as used in LUFIT may serve as a valid tool in the quantification of IPF, since this mainly affects the subpleural space.

Details

ISSN :
14230356 and 00257931
Volume :
100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Respiration
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e75f7701a7fa835b013159333f95b084
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000515182