IVCVJul 21, 2023

Bone mineral density estimation from a plain X-ray image by learning decomposition into projections of bone-segmented computed tomography

arXiv:2307.11513v115 citationsh-index: 62
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This provides a low-cost, low-dose method for frequent bone health monitoring in clinical practice, though it is incremental as it builds on existing approaches with a more efficient method.

The study tackled the problem of estimating bone mineral density (BMD) from plain X-ray images for opportunistic screening of osteoporosis, achieving high accuracy with Pearson correlation coefficients of 0.880 and 0.920 for DXA-measured and QCT-measured BMD estimation, respectively, and root mean square coefficient of variation values of 3.27 to 3.79% across different poses.

Osteoporosis is a prevalent bone disease that causes fractures in fragile bones, leading to a decline in daily living activities. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) and quantitative computed tomography (QCT) are highly accurate for diagnosing osteoporosis; however, these modalities require special equipment and scan protocols. To frequently monitor bone health, low-cost, low-dose, and ubiquitously available diagnostic methods are highly anticipated. In this study, we aim to perform bone mineral density (BMD) estimation from a plain X-ray image for opportunistic screening, which is potentially useful for early diagnosis. Existing methods have used multi-stage approaches consisting of extraction of the region of interest and simple regression to estimate BMD, which require a large amount of training data. Therefore, we propose an efficient method that learns decomposition into projections of bone-segmented QCT for BMD estimation under limited datasets. The proposed method achieved high accuracy in BMD estimation, where Pearson correlation coefficients of 0.880 and 0.920 were observed for DXA-measured BMD and QCT-measured BMD estimation tasks, respectively, and the root mean square of the coefficient of variation values were 3.27 to 3.79% for four measurements with different poses. Furthermore, we conducted extensive validation experiments, including multi-pose, uncalibrated-CT, and compression experiments toward actual application in routine clinical practice.

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