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Comparing methods of detecting and segmenting unruptured intracranial aneurysms on TOF-MRAS: The ADAM challenge

Authors :
Kimberley M. Timmins
Irene C. van der Schaaf
Edwin Bennink
Ynte M. Ruigrok
Xingle An
Michael Baumgartner
Pascal Bourdon
Riccardo De Feo
Tommaso Di Noto
Florian Dubost
Augusto Fava-Sanches
Xue Feng
Corentin Giroud
Inteneural Group
Minghui Hu
Paul F. Jaeger
Juhana Kaiponen
Michał Klimont
Yuexiang Li
Hongwei Li
Yi Lin
Timo Loehr
Jun Ma
Klaus H. Maier-Hein
Guillaume Marie
Bjoern Menze
Jonas Richiardi
Saifeddine Rjiba
Dhaval Shah
Suprosanna Shit
Jussi Tohka
Thierry Urruty
Urszula Walińska
Xiaoping Yang
Yunqiao Yang
Yin Yin
Birgitta K. Velthuis
Hugo J. Kuijf
Source :
NeuroImage, Vol 238, Iss , Pp 118216- (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2021.

Abstract

Accurate detection and quantification of unruptured intracranial aneurysms (UIAs) is important for rupture risk assessment and to allow an informed treatment decision to be made. Currently, 2D manual measures used to assess UIAs on Time-of-Flight magnetic resonance angiographies (TOF-MRAs) lack 3D information and there is substantial inter-observer variability for both aneurysm detection and assessment of aneurysm size and growth. 3D measures could be helpful to improve aneurysm detection and quantification but are time-consuming and would therefore benefit from a reliable automatic UIA detection and segmentation method. The Aneurysm Detection and segMentation (ADAM) challenge was organised in which methods for automatic UIA detection and segmentation were developed and submitted to be evaluated on a diverse clinical TOF-MRA dataset.A training set (113 cases with a total of 129 UIAs) was released, each case including a TOF-MRA, a structural MR image (T1, T2 or FLAIR), annotation of any present UIA(s) and the centre voxel of the UIA(s). A test set of 141 cases (with 153 UIAs) was used for evaluation. Two tasks were proposed: (1) detection and (2) segmentation of UIAs on TOF-MRAs. Teams developed and submitted containerised methods to be evaluated on the test set. Task 1 was evaluated using metrics of sensitivity and false positive count. Task 2 was evaluated using dice similarity coefficient, modified hausdorff distance (95th percentile) and volumetric similarity. For each task, a ranking was made based on the average of the metrics.In total, eleven teams participated in task 1 and nine of those teams participated in task 2. Task 1 was won by a method specifically designed for the detection task (i.e. not participating in task 2). Based on segmentation metrics, the top two methods for task 2 performed statistically significantly better than all other methods. The detection performance of the top-ranking methods was comparable to visual inspection for larger aneurysms. Segmentation performance of the top ranking method, after selection of true UIAs, was similar to interobserver performance. The ADAM challenge remains open for future submissions and improved submissions, with a live leaderboard to provide benchmarking for method developments at https://adam.isi.uu.nl/.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10959572
Volume :
238
Issue :
118216-
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
NeuroImage
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.4f5da06bc407783d684467324f4e5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118216