CVJul 7, 2023
Matching in the Wild: Learning Anatomical Embeddings for Multi-Modality ImagesXiaoyu Bai, Fan Bai, Xiaofei Huo et al.
Radiotherapists require accurate registration of MR/CT images to effectively use information from both modalities. In a typical registration pipeline, rigid or affine transformations are applied to roughly align the fixed and moving images before proceeding with the deformation step. While recent learning-based methods have shown promising results in the rigid/affine step, these methods often require images with similar field-of-view (FOV) for successful alignment. As a result, aligning images with different FOVs remains a challenging task. Self-supervised landmark detection methods like self-supervised Anatomical eMbedding (SAM) have emerged as a useful tool for mapping and cropping images to similar FOVs. However, these methods are currently limited to intra-modality use only. To address this limitation and enable cross-modality matching, we propose a new approach called Cross-SAM. Our approach utilizes a novel iterative process that alternates between embedding learning and CT-MRI registration. We start by applying aggressive contrast augmentation on both CT and MRI images to train a SAM model. We then use this SAM to identify corresponding regions on paired images using robust grid-points matching, followed by a point-set based affine/rigid registration, and a deformable fine-tuning step to produce registered paired images. We use these registered pairs to enhance the matching ability of SAM, which is then processed iteratively. We use the final model for cross-modality matching tasks. We evaluated our approach on two CT-MRI affine registration datasets and found that Cross-SAM achieved robust affine registration on both datasets, significantly outperforming other methods and achieving state-of-the-art performance.
CVNov 25, 2023
UAE: Universal Anatomical Embedding on Multi-modality Medical ImagesXiaoyu Bai, Fan Bai, Xiaofei Huo et al.
Identifying specific anatomical structures (\textit{e.g.}, lesions or landmarks) in medical images plays a fundamental role in medical image analysis. Exemplar-based landmark detection methods are receiving increasing attention since they can detect arbitrary anatomical points in inference while do not need landmark annotations in training. They use self-supervised learning to acquire a discriminative embedding for each voxel within the image. These approaches can identify corresponding landmarks through nearest neighbor matching and has demonstrated promising results across various tasks. However, current methods still face challenges in: (1) differentiating voxels with similar appearance but different semantic meanings (\textit{e.g.}, two adjacent structures without clear borders); (2) matching voxels with similar semantics but markedly different appearance (\textit{e.g.}, the same vessel before and after contrast injection); and (3) cross-modality matching (\textit{e.g.}, CT-MRI landmark-based registration). To overcome these challenges, we propose universal anatomical embedding (UAE), which is a unified framework designed to learn appearance, semantic, and cross-modality anatomical embeddings. Specifically, UAE incorporates three key innovations: (1) semantic embedding learning with prototypical contrastive loss; (2) a fixed-point-based matching strategy; and (3) an iterative approach for cross-modality embedding learning. We thoroughly evaluated UAE across intra- and inter-modality tasks, including one-shot landmark detection, lesion tracking on longitudinal CT scans, and CT-MRI affine/rigid registration with varying field of view. Our results suggest that UAE outperforms state-of-the-art methods, offering a robust and versatile approach for landmark based medical image analysis tasks. Code and trained models are available at: \href{https://shorturl.at/bgsB3}