Jukka Hirvasniemi

2papers

2 Papers

IVAug 21, 2019
Adaptive Segmentation of Knee Radiographs for Selecting the Optimal ROI in Texture Analysis

Neslihan Bayramoglu, Aleksei Tiulpin, Jukka Hirvasniemi et al.

The purposes of this study were to investigate: 1) the effect of placement of region-of-interest (ROI) for texture analysis of subchondral bone in knee radiographs, and 2) the ability of several texture descriptors to distinguish between the knees with and without radiographic osteoarthritis (OA). Bilateral posterior-anterior knee radiographs were analyzed from the baseline of OAI and MOST datasets. A fully automatic method to locate the most informative region from subchondral bone using adaptive segmentation was developed. We used an oversegmentation strategy for partitioning knee images into the compact regions that follow natural texture boundaries. LBP, Fractal Dimension (FD), Haralick features, Shannon entropy, and HOG methods were computed within the standard ROI and within the proposed adaptive ROIs. Subsequently, we built logistic regression models to identify and compare the performances of each texture descriptor and each ROI placement method using 5-fold cross validation setting. Importantly, we also investigated the generalizability of our approach by training the models on OAI and testing them on MOST dataset.We used area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (AUC) and average precision (AP) obtained from the precision-recall (PR) curve to compare the results. We found that the adaptive ROI improves the classification performance (OA vs. non-OA) over the commonly used standard ROI (up to 9% percent increase in AUC). We also observed that, from all texture parameters, LBP yielded the best performance in all settings with the best AUC of 0.840 [0.825, 0.852] and associated AP of 0.804 [0.786, 0.820]. Compared to the current state-of-the-art approaches, our results suggest that the proposed adaptive ROI approach in texture analysis of subchondral bone can increase the diagnostic performance for detecting the presence of radiographic OA.

MED-PHFeb 13, 2019
Bone Texture Analysis for Prediction of Incident Radio-graphic Hip Osteoarthritis Using Machine Learning: Data from the Cohort Hip and Cohort Knee (CHECK) study

Jukka Hirvasniemi, Willem Paul Gielis, Saeed Arbabi et al.

Our aim was to assess the ability of radiography-based bone texture parameters in proximal femur and acetabulum to predict incident radiographic hip osteoarthritis (rHOA) over a 10 years period. Pelvic radiographs from CHECK (Cohort Hip and Cohort Knee) at baseline (987 hips) were analyzed for bone texture using fractal signature analysis in proximal femur and acetabulum. Elastic net (machine learning) was used to predict the incidence of rHOA (Kellgren-Lawrence grade (KL) > 1 or total hip replacement (THR)), joint space narrowing score (JSN, range 0-3), and osteophyte score (OST, range 0-3) after 10 years. Performance of prediction models was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC AUC). Of the 987 hips without rHOA at baseline, 435 (44%) had rHOA at 10-year follow-up. Of the 667 hips with JSN grade 0 at baseline, 471 (71%) had JSN grade > 0 at 10-year follow-up. Of the 613 hips with OST grade 0 at baseline, 526 (86%) had OST grade > 0 at 10-year follow-up. AUCs for the models including age, gender, and body mass index to predict incident rHOA, JSN, and OST were 0.59, 0.54, and 0.51, respectively. The inclusion of bone texture parameters in the models improved the prediction of incident rHOA (ROC AUC 0.66 and 0.71 when baseline KL was also included in the model) and JSN (ROC AUC 0.62), but not incident OST (ROC AUC 0.53). Bone texture analysis provides additional information for predicting incident rHOA or THR over 10 years.