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Principal component analysis fosr fast and model-free denoising of multi b-value diffusion-weighted MR images

Authors :
Gurney-Champion, Oliver J
Collins, David J
Wetscherek, Andreas
Rata, Mihaela
Klaassen, Remy
van Laarhoven, Hanneke W M
Harrington, Kevin J
Oelfke, Uwe
Orton, Matthew R
Radiology and Nuclear Medicine
Graduate School
Oncology
CCA - Imaging and biomarkers
AGEM - Re-generation and cancer of the digestive system
Source :
Physics in Medicine and Biology, Physics in medicine and biology, 64(10):105015. IOP Publishing Ltd.
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
IOP Publishing, 2019.

Abstract

Despite the utility of tumour characterisation using quantitative parameter maps from multi-b-value diffusion-weighted MRI (DWI), clinicians often prefer the use of the image with highest diffusion-weighting (b-value), for instance for defining regions of interest (ROIs). However, these images are typically degraded by noise, as they do not utilize the information from the full acquisition. We present a principal component analysis (PCA) approach for model-free denoising of DWI data. PCA-denoising was compared to synthetic MRI, where a diffusion model is fitted for each voxel and a denoised image at a given b-value is generated from the model fit. A quantitative comparison of systematic and random errors was performed on data simulated using several diffusion models (mono-exponential, bi-exponential, stretched-exponential and kurtosis). A qualitative visual comparison was also performed for in vivo images in six healthy volunteers and three pancreatic cancer patients. In simulations, the reduction in random errors from PCA-denoising was substantial (up to 55%) and similar to synthetic MRI (up to 53%). Model-based synthetic MRI denoising resulted in substantial (up to 29% of signal) systematic errors, whereas PCA-denoising was able to denoise without introducing systematic errors (less than 2%). In vivo, the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and sharpness of PCA-denoised images were superior to synthetic MRI, resulting in clearer tumour boundaries. In the presence of motion, PCA-denoising did not cause image blurring, unlike image averaging or synthetic MRI. Multi-b-value MRI can be denoised model-free with our PCA-denoising strategy that reduces noise to a level similar to synthetic MRI, but without introducing systematic errors associated with the synthetic MRI method.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13616560 and 00319155
Volume :
64
Issue :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Physics in Medicine and Biology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....542b81e59c871ff7f7e8e14ebd5f9b9e