IVCVLGMLJan 8, 2020

Spinal Metastases Segmentation in MR Imaging using Deep Convolutional Neural Networks

arXiv:2001.05834v27 citations
AI Analysis

This addresses a domain-specific problem for medical imaging in oncology, offering incremental improvements in segmentation accuracy for therapy planning and surgical support.

The study tackled the problem of segmenting spinal metastases in MR images using a deep convolutional neural network, achieving average Dice scores up to 77.6% and sensitivity rates up to 78.9% compared to expert annotations.

This study's objective was to segment spinal metastases in diagnostic MR images using a deep learning-based approach. Segmentation of such lesions can present a pivotal step towards enhanced therapy planning and validation, as well as intervention support during minimally invasive and image-guided surgeries like radiofrequency ablations. For this purpose, we used a U-Net like architecture trained with 40 clinical cases including both, lytic and sclerotic lesion types and various MR sequences. Our proposed method was evaluated with regards to various factors influencing the segmentation quality, e.g. the used MR sequences and the input dimension. We quantitatively assessed our experiments using Dice coefficients, sensitivity and specificity rates. Compared to expertly annotated lesion segmentations, the experiments yielded promising results with average Dice scores up to 77.6% and mean sensitivity rates up to 78.9%. To our best knowledge, our proposed study is one of the first to tackle this particular issue, which limits direct comparability with related works. In respect to similar deep learning-based lesion segmentations, e.g. in liver MR images or spinal CT images, our experiments showed similar or in some respects superior segmentation quality. Overall, our automatic approach can provide almost expert-like segmentation accuracy in this challenging and ambitious task.

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