Dennis M. Hedderich

CV
h-index12
3papers
3citations
Novelty48%
AI Score47

3 Papers

16.9CVMar 19Code
Translating MRI to PET through Conditional Diffusion Models with Enhanced Pathology Awareness

Yitong Li, Igor Yakushev, Dennis M. Hedderich et al.

Positron emission tomography (PET) is a widely recognized technique for diagnosing neurodegenerative diseases, offering critical functional insights. However, its high costs and radiation exposure hinder its widespread use. In contrast, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) does not involve such limitations. While MRI also detects neurodegenerative changes, it is less sensitive for diagnosis compared to PET. To overcome such limitations, one approach is to generate synthetic PET from MRI. Recent advances in generative models have paved the way for cross-modality medical image translation; however, existing methods largely emphasize structural preservation while neglecting the critical need for pathology awareness. To address this gap, we propose PASTA, a novel image translation framework built on conditional diffusion models with enhanced pathology awareness. PASTA surpasses state-of-the-art methods by preserving both structural and pathological details through its highly interactive dual-arm architecture and multi-modal condition integration. Additionally, we introduce a novel cycle exchange consistency and volumetric generation strategy that significantly enhances PASTA's ability to produce high-quality 3D PET images. Our qualitative and quantitative results demonstrate the high quality and pathology awareness of the synthesized PET scans. For Alzheimer's diagnosis, the performance of these synthesized scans improves over MRI by 4%, almost reaching the performance of actual PET. Our code is available at https://github.com/ai-med/PASTA.

CVApr 9, 2024Code
From Barlow Twins to Triplet Training: Differentiating Dementia with Limited Data

Yitong Li, Tom Nuno Wolf, Sebastian Pölsterl et al.

Differential diagnosis of dementia is challenging due to overlapping symptoms, with structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) being the primary method for diagnosis. Despite the clinical value of computer-aided differential diagnosis, research has been limited, mainly due to the absence of public datasets that contain diverse types of dementia. This leaves researchers with small in-house datasets that are insufficient for training deep neural networks (DNNs). Self-supervised learning shows promise for utilizing unlabeled MRI scans in training, but small batch sizes for volumetric brain scans make its application challenging. To address these issues, we propose Triplet Training for differential diagnosis with limited target data. It consists of three key stages: (i) self-supervised pre-training on unlabeled data with Barlow Twins, (ii) self-distillation on task-related data, and (iii) fine-tuning on the target dataset. Our approach significantly outperforms traditional training strategies, achieving a balanced accuracy of 75.6%. We further provide insights into the training process by visualizing changes in the latent space after each step. Finally, we validate the robustness of Triplet Training in terms of its individual components in a comprehensive ablation study. Our code is available at https://github.com/ai-med/TripletTraining.

CVOct 17, 2025Code
Diffusion Bridge Networks Simulate Clinical-grade PET from MRI for Dementia Diagnostics

Yitong Li, Ralph Buchert, Benita Schmitz-Koep et al.

Positron emission tomography (PET) with 18F-Fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) is an established tool in the diagnostic workup of patients with suspected dementing disorders. However, compared to the routinely available magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), FDG-PET remains significantly less accessible and substantially more expensive. Here, we present SiM2P, a 3D diffusion bridge-based framework that learns a probabilistic mapping from MRI and auxiliary patient information to simulate FDG-PET images of diagnostic quality. In a blinded clinical reader study, two neuroradiologists and two nuclear medicine physicians rated the original MRI and SiM2P-simulated PET images of patients with Alzheimer's disease, behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia, and cognitively healthy controls. SiM2P significantly improved the overall diagnostic accuracy of differentiating between three groups from 75.0% to 84.7% (p<0.05). Notably, the simulated PET images received higher diagnostic certainty ratings and achieved superior interrater agreement compared to the MRI images. Finally, we developed a practical workflow for local deployment of the SiM2P framework. It requires as few as 20 site-specific cases and only basic demographic information. This approach makes the established diagnostic benefits of FDG-PET imaging more accessible to patients with suspected dementing disorders, potentially improving early detection and differential diagnosis in resource-limited settings. Our code is available at https://github.com/Yiiitong/SiM2P.