IVLGMED-PHMar 17, 2023

Posterior Estimation Using Deep Learning: A Simulation Study of Compartmental Modeling in Dynamic PET

arXiv:2303.10057v12 citationsh-index: 33
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the underexplored uncertainties in medical imaging for dynamic PET applications, though it is incremental as it builds on existing CVAE frameworks.

This work tackled the problem of efficiently estimating posterior distributions of imaging parameters in dynamic PET using deep learning, specifically comparing CVAE-dual-encoder and CVAE-dual-decoder networks, which yielded results in good agreement with unbiased MCMC distributions.

Background: In medical imaging, images are usually treated as deterministic, while their uncertainties are largely underexplored. Purpose: This work aims at using deep learning to efficiently estimate posterior distributions of imaging parameters, which in turn can be used to derive the most probable parameters as well as their uncertainties. Methods: Our deep learning-based approaches are based on a variational Bayesian inference framework, which is implemented using two different deep neural networks based on conditional variational auto-encoder (CVAE), CVAE-dual-encoder and CVAE-dual-decoder. The conventional CVAE framework, i.e., CVAE-vanilla, can be regarded as a simplified case of these two neural networks. We applied these approaches to a simulation study of dynamic brain PET imaging using a reference region-based kinetic model. Results: In the simulation study, we estimated posterior distributions of PET kinetic parameters given a measurement of time-activity curve. Our proposed CVAE-dual-encoder and CVAE-dual-decoder yield results that are in good agreement with the asymptotically unbiased posterior distributions sampled by Markov Chain Monte Carlo (MCMC). The CVAE-vanilla can also be used for estimating posterior distributions, although it has an inferior performance to both CVAE-dual-encoder and CVAE-dual-decoder. Conclusions: We have evaluated the performance of our deep learning approaches for estimating posterior distributions in dynamic brain PET. Our deep learning approaches yield posterior distributions, which are in good agreement with unbiased distributions estimated by MCMC. All these neural networks have different characteristics and can be chosen by the user for specific applications. The proposed methods are general and can be adapted to other problems.

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