6533b85afe1ef96bd12b9797
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Robust Resolution-Enhanced Prostate Segmentation in Magnetic Resonance and Ultrasound Images through Convolutional Neural Networks
Paula Pelechano GómezJuan Casanova Ramón-borjaVictor Gonzalez-perezOscar J. Pellicer-valeroJosé D. Martín-guerreroMaría Barrios BenitoJosé Rubio-brionesIsabel Martín GarcíaM. J. Rupérezsubject
Computer scienceMR prostate imagingUS prostate imagingINGENIERIA MECANICAconvolutional neural networklcsh:TechnologyConvolutional neural network030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaginglcsh:Chemistry03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinemedicineGeneral Materials Sciencelcsh:QH301-705.5Instrumentation030304 developmental biologyFluid Flow and Transfer Processes0303 health sciencesmedicine.diagnostic_testlcsh:Tbusiness.industryProcess Chemistry and TechnologyConvolutional Neural NetworksUltrasoundResolution (electron density)General EngineeringMagnetic resonance imagingPattern recognitionProstate Segmentationlcsh:QC1-999Computer Science ApplicationsNeural resolution enhancementlcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999lcsh:TA1-2040Christian ministryArtificial intelligencelcsh:Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)Magnetic Resonance and Ultrasound Imagesbusinesslcsh:PhysicsProstate segmentationdescription
[EN] Prostate segmentations are required for an ever-increasing number of medical applications, such as image-based lesion detection, fusion-guided biopsy and focal therapies. However, obtaining accurate segmentations is laborious, requires expertise and, even then, the inter-observer variability remains high. In this paper, a robust, accurate and generalizable model for Magnetic Resonance (MR) and three-dimensional (3D) Ultrasound (US) prostate image segmentation is proposed. It uses a densenet-resnet-based Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) combined with techniques such as deep supervision, checkpoint ensembling and Neural Resolution Enhancement. The MR prostate segmentation model was trained with five challenging and heterogeneous MR prostate datasets (and two US datasets), with segmentations from many different experts with varying segmentation criteria. The model achieves a consistently strong performance in all datasets independently (mean Dice Similarity Coefficient -DSC- above 0.91 for all datasets except for one), outperforming the inter-expert variability significantly in MR (mean DSC of 0.9099 vs. 0.8794). When evaluated on the publicly available Promise12 challenge dataset, it attains a similar performance to the best entries. In summary, the model has the potential of having a significant impact on current prostate procedures, undercutting, and even eliminating, the need of manual segmentations through improvements in terms of robustness, generalizability and output resolution
year | journal | country | edition | language |
---|---|---|---|---|
2021-01-18 | Applied Sciences |