Jeong Hoon Lee

IV
h-index52
5papers
15citations
Novelty45%
AI Score36

5 Papers

CVMar 1
The MAMA-MIA Challenge: Advancing Generalizability and Fairness in Breast MRI Tumor Segmentation and Treatment Response Prediction

Lidia Garrucho, Smriti Joshi, Kaisar Kushibar et al.

Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed malignancy among women worldwide and a leading cause of cancer-related mortality. Dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging plays a central role in tumor characterization and treatment monitoring, particularly in patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy. However, existing artificial intelligence models for breast magnetic resonance imaging are often developed using single-center data and evaluated using aggregate performance metrics, limiting their generalizability and obscuring potential performance disparities across demographic subgroups. The MAMA-MIA Challenge was designed to address these limitations by introducing a large-scale benchmark that jointly evaluates primary tumor segmentation and prediction of pathologic complete response using pre-treatment magnetic resonance imaging only. The training cohort comprised 1,506 patients from multiple institutions in the United States, while evaluation was conducted on an external test set of 574 patients from three independent European centers to assess cross-continental and cross-institutional generalization. A unified scoring framework combined predictive performance with subgroup consistency across age, menopausal status, and breast density. Twenty-six international teams participated in the final evaluation phase. Results demonstrate substantial performance variability under external testing and reveal trade-offs between overall accuracy and subgroup fairness. The challenge provides standardized datasets, evaluation protocols, and public resources to promote the development of robust and equitable artificial intelligence systems for breast cancer imaging.

IVJan 31, 2025
Multimodal MRI-Ultrasound AI for Prostate Cancer Detection Outperforms Radiologist MRI Interpretation: A Multi-Center Study

Hassan Jahanandish, Shengtian Sang, Cynthia Xinran Li et al. · stanford

Pre-biopsy magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is increasingly used to target suspicious prostate lesions. This has led to artificial intelligence (AI) applications improving MRI-based detection of clinically significant prostate cancer (CsPCa). However, MRI-detected lesions must still be mapped to transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) images during biopsy, which results in missing CsPCa. This study systematically evaluates a multimodal AI framework integrating MRI and TRUS image sequences to enhance CsPCa identification. The study included 3110 patients from three cohorts across two institutions who underwent prostate biopsy. The proposed framework, based on the 3D UNet architecture, was evaluated on 1700 test cases, comparing performance to unimodal AI models that use either MRI or TRUS alone. Additionally, the proposed model was compared to radiologists in a cohort of 110 patients. The multimodal AI approach achieved superior sensitivity (80%) and Lesion Dice (42%) compared to unimodal MRI (73%, 30%) and TRUS models (49%, 27%). Compared to radiologists, the multimodal model showed higher specificity (88% vs. 78%) and Lesion Dice (38% vs. 33%), with equivalent sensitivity (79%). Our findings demonstrate the potential of multimodal AI to improve CsPCa lesion targeting during biopsy and treatment planning, surpassing current unimodal models and radiologists; ultimately improving outcomes for prostate cancer patients.

IVFeb 1, 2025
Prostate-Specific Foundation Models for Enhanced Detection of Clinically Significant Cancer

Jeong Hoon Lee, Cynthia Xinran Li, Hassan Jahanandish et al. · stanford

Accurate prostate cancer diagnosis remains challenging. Even when using MRI, radiologists exhibit low specificity and significant inter-observer variability, leading to potential delays or inaccuracies in identifying clinically significant cancers. This leads to numerous unnecessary biopsies and risks of missing clinically significant cancers. Here we present prostate vision contrastive network (ProViCNet), prostate organ-specific vision foundation models for Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) and Trans-Rectal Ultrasound imaging (TRUS) for comprehensive cancer detection. ProViCNet was trained and validated using 4,401 patients across six institutions, as a prostate cancer detection model on radiology images relying on patch-level contrastive learning guided by biopsy confirmed radiologist annotations. ProViCNet demonstrated consistent performance across multiple internal and external validation cohorts with area under the receiver operating curve values ranging from 0.875 to 0.966, significantly outperforming radiologists in the reader study (0.907 versus 0.805, p<0.001) for mpMRI, while achieving 0.670 to 0.740 for TRUS. We also integrated ProViCNet with standard PSA to develop a virtual screening test, and we showed that we can maintain the high sensitivity for detecting clinically significant cancers while more than doubling specificity from 15% to 38% (p<0.001), thereby substantially reducing unnecessary biopsies. These findings highlight that ProViCNet's potential for enhancing prostate cancer diagnosis accuracy and reduce unnecessary biopsies, thereby optimizing diagnostic pathways.

IVFeb 2, 2025
Registration-Enhanced Segmentation Method for Prostate Cancer in Ultrasound Images

Shengtian Sang, Hassan Jahanandish, Cynthia Xinran Li et al. · stanford

Prostate cancer is a major cause of cancer-related deaths in men, where early detection greatly improves survival rates. Although MRI-TRUS fusion biopsy offers superior accuracy by combining MRI's detailed visualization with TRUS's real-time guidance, it is a complex and time-intensive procedure that relies heavily on manual annotations, leading to potential errors. To address these challenges, we propose a fully automatic MRI-TRUS fusion-based segmentation method that identifies prostate tumors directly in TRUS images without requiring manual annotations. Unlike traditional multimodal fusion approaches that rely on naive data concatenation, our method integrates a registration-segmentation framework to align and leverage spatial information between MRI and TRUS modalities. This alignment enhances segmentation accuracy and reduces reliance on manual effort. Our approach was validated on a dataset of 1,747 patients from Stanford Hospital, achieving an average Dice coefficient of 0.212, outperforming TRUS-only (0.117) and naive MRI-TRUS fusion (0.132) methods, with significant improvements (p $<$ 0.01). This framework demonstrates the potential for reducing the complexity of prostate cancer diagnosis and provides a flexible architecture applicable to other multimodal medical imaging tasks.

IVDec 14, 2024
Mask Enhanced Deeply Supervised Prostate Cancer Detection on B-mode Micro-Ultrasound

Lichun Zhang, Steve Ran Zhou, Moon Hyung Choi et al. · stanford

Prostate cancer is a leading cause of cancer-related deaths among men. The recent development of high frequency, micro-ultrasound imaging offers improved resolution compared to conventional ultrasound and potentially a better ability to differentiate clinically significant cancer from normal tissue. However, the features of prostate cancer remain subtle, with ambiguous borders with normal tissue and large variations in appearance, making it challenging for both machine learning and humans to localize it on micro-ultrasound images. We propose a novel Mask Enhanced Deeply-supervised Micro-US network, termed MedMusNet, to automatically and more accurately segment prostate cancer to be used as potential targets for biopsy procedures. MedMusNet leverages predicted masks of prostate cancer to enforce the learned features layer-wisely within the network, reducing the influence of noise and improving overall consistency across frames. MedMusNet successfully detected 76% of clinically significant cancer with a Dice Similarity Coefficient of 0.365, significantly outperforming the baseline Swin-M2F in specificity and accuracy (Wilcoxon test, Bonferroni correction, p-value<0.05). While the lesion-level and patient-level analyses showed improved performance compared to human experts and different baseline, the improvements did not reach statistical significance, likely on account of the small cohort. We have presented a novel approach to automatically detect and segment clinically significant prostate cancer on B-mode micro-ultrasound images. Our MedMusNet model outperformed other models, surpassing even human experts. These preliminary results suggest the potential for aiding urologists in prostate cancer diagnosis via biopsy and treatment decision-making.