Anthony T. Wu

CV
h-index14
4papers
1citation
Novelty44%
AI Score47

4 Papers

LGApr 9Code
Benchmarking Deep Learning for Future Liver Remnant Segmentation in Colorectal Liver Metastasis

Anthony T. Wu, Arghavan Rezvani, Kela Liu et al.

Accurate segmentation of the future liver remnant (FLR) is critical for surgical planning in colorectal liver metastases (CRLM) to prevent fatal post-hepatectomy liver failure. However, this segmentation task is technically challenging due to complex resection boundaries, convoluted hepatic vasculature and diffuse metastatic lesions. A primary bottleneck in developing automated AI tools has been the lack of high-fidelity, validated data. We address this gap by manually refining all 197 volumes from the public CRLM-CT-Seg dataset, creating the first open-source, validated benchmark for this task. We then establish the first segmentation baselines, comparing cascaded (Liver->CRLM->FLR) and end-to-end (E2E) strategies using nnU-Net, SwinUNETR, and STU-Net. We find a cascaded nnU-Net achieves the best final FLR segmentation Dice (0.767), while the pretrained STU-Net provides superior CRLM segmentation (0.620 Dice) and is significantly more robust to cascaded errors. This work provides the first validated benchmark and a reproducible framework to accelerate research in AI-assisted surgical planning.

CVOct 30, 2025
MoME: Mixture of Visual Language Medical Experts for Medical Imaging Segmentation

Arghavan Rezvani, Xiangyi Yan, Anthony T. Wu et al.

In this study, we propose MoME, a Mixture of Visual Language Medical Experts, for Medical Image Segmentation. MoME adapts the successful Mixture of Experts (MoE) paradigm, widely used in Large Language Models (LLMs), for medical vision-language tasks. The architecture enables dynamic expert selection by effectively utilizing multi-scale visual features tailored to the intricacies of medical imagery, enriched with textual embeddings. This work explores a novel integration of vision-language models for this domain. Utilizing an assembly of 10 datasets, encompassing 3,410 CT scans, MoME demonstrates strong performance on a comprehensive medical imaging segmentation benchmark. Our approach explores the integration of foundation models for medical imaging, benefiting from the established efficacy of MoE in boosting model performance by incorporating textual information. Demonstrating competitive precision across multiple datasets, MoME explores a novel architecture for achieving robust results in medical image analysis.

CVApr 9
Rotation Equivariant Convolutions in Deformable Registration of Brain MRI

Arghavan Rezvani, Kun Han, Anthony T. Wu et al.

Image registration is a fundamental task that aligns anatomical structures between images. While CNNs perform well, they lack rotation equivariance - a rotated input does not produce a correspondingly rotated output. This hinders performance by failing to exploit the rotational symmetries inherent in anatomical structures, particularly in brain MRI. In this work, we integrate rotation-equivariant convolutions into deformable brain MRI registration networks. We evaluate this approach by replacing standard encoders with equivariant ones in three baseline architectures, testing on multiple public brain MRI datasets. Our experiments demonstrate that equivariant encoders have three key advantages: 1) They achieve higher registration accuracy while reducing network parameters, confirming the benefit of this anatomical inductive bias. 2) They outperform baselines on rotated input pairs, demonstrating robustness to orientation variations common in clinical practice. 3) They show improved performance with less training data, indicating greater sample efficiency. Our results demonstrate that incorporating geometric priors is a critical step toward building more robust, accurate, and efficient registration models.

CVSep 9, 2025Code
XOCT: Enhancing OCT to OCTA Translation via Cross-Dimensional Supervised Multi-Scale Feature Learning

Pooya Khosravi, Kun Han, Anthony T. Wu et al.

Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography (OCTA) and its derived en-face projections provide high-resolution visualization of the retinal and choroidal vasculature, which is critical for the rapid and accurate diagnosis of retinal diseases. However, acquiring high-quality OCTA images is challenging due to motion sensitivity and the high costs associated with software modifications for conventional OCT devices. Moreover, current deep learning methods for OCT-to-OCTA translation often overlook the vascular differences across retinal layers and struggle to reconstruct the intricate, dense vascular details necessary for reliable diagnosis. To overcome these limitations, we propose XOCT, a novel deep learning framework that integrates Cross-Dimensional Supervision (CDS) with a Multi-Scale Feature Fusion (MSFF) network for layer-aware vascular reconstruction. Our CDS module leverages 2D layer-wise en-face projections, generated via segmentation-weighted z-axis averaging, as supervisory signals to compel the network to learn distinct representations for each retinal layer through fine-grained, targeted guidance. Meanwhile, the MSFF module enhances vessel delineation through multi-scale feature extraction combined with a channel reweighting strategy, effectively capturing vascular details at multiple spatial scales. Our experiments on the OCTA-500 dataset demonstrate XOCT's improvements, especially for the en-face projections which are significant for clinical evaluation of retinal pathologies, underscoring its potential to enhance OCTA accessibility, reliability, and diagnostic value for ophthalmic disease detection and monitoring. The code is available at https://github.com/uci-cbcl/XOCT.