IVCVLGMED-PHAug 6, 2021

AI-based Aortic Vessel Tree Segmentation for Cardiovascular Diseases Treatment: Status Quo

arXiv:2108.02998v220 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This review addresses the need for efficient segmentation in clinical practice for patients with aortic diseases, but it is incremental as it summarizes existing methods without introducing new ones.

This paper systematically reviews automatic and semi-automatic segmentation techniques for the aortic vessel tree, highlighting that these algorithms can complete the task in a fraction of the manual time, which takes a whole day, enabling feasible clinical monitoring of cardiovascular diseases.

The aortic vessel tree is composed of the aorta and its branching arteries, and plays a key role in supplying the whole body with blood. Aortic diseases, like aneurysms or dissections, can lead to an aortic rupture, whose treatment with open surgery is highly risky. Therefore, patients commonly undergo drug treatment under constant monitoring, which requires regular inspections of the vessels through imaging. The standard imaging modality for diagnosis and monitoring is computed tomography (CT), which can provide a detailed picture of the aorta and its branching vessels if completed with a contrast agent, called CT angiography (CTA). Optimally, the whole aortic vessel tree geometry from consecutive CTAs is overlaid and compared. This allows not only detection of changes in the aorta, but also of its branches, caused by the primary pathology or newly developed. When performed manually, this reconstruction requires slice by slice contouring, which could easily take a whole day for a single aortic vessel tree, and is therefore not feasible in clinical practice. Automatic or semi-automatic vessel tree segmentation algorithms, however, can complete this task in a fraction of the manual execution time and run in parallel to the clinical routine of the clinicians. In this paper, we systematically review computing techniques for the automatic and semi-automatic segmentation of the aortic vessel tree. The review concludes with an in-depth discussion on how close these state-of-the-art approaches are to an application in clinical practice and how active this research field is, taking into account the number of publications, datasets and challenges.

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