Fetal MRI by robust deep generative prior reconstruction and diffeomorphic registration: application to gestational age prediction
This addresses motion correction in fetal MRI for medical imaging applications, offering incremental improvements over existing methods.
The paper tackles the problem of motion artifacts in fetal MRI by proposing a deep generative prior for volumetric reconstruction integrated with diffeomorphic registration, resulting in improved image resolution and more accurate gestational age prediction with a mean absolute error of 0.618 weeks (R²=0.958).
Magnetic resonance imaging of whole fetal body and placenta is limited by different sources of motion affecting the womb. Usual scanning techniques employ single-shot multi-slice sequences where anatomical information in different slices may be subject to different deformations, contrast variations or artifacts. Volumetric reconstruction formulations have been proposed to correct for these factors, but they must accommodate a non-homogeneous and non-isotropic sampling, so regularization becomes necessary. Thus, in this paper we propose a deep generative prior for robust volumetric reconstructions integrated with a diffeomorphic volume to slice registration method. Experiments are performed to validate our contributions and compare with a state of the art method in a cohort of $72$ fetal datasets in the range of $20-36$ weeks gestational age. Results suggest improved image resolution and more accurate prediction of gestational age at scan when comparing to a state of the art reconstruction method. In addition, gestational age prediction results from our volumetric reconstructions compare favourably with existing brain-based approaches, with boosted accuracy when integrating information of organs other than the brain. Namely, a mean absolute error of $0.618$ weeks ($R^2=0.958$) is achieved when combining fetal brain and trunk information.