IVCVOct 4, 2023

All Sizes Matter: Improving Volumetric Brain Segmentation on Small Lesions

arXiv:2310.02829v13 citationsh-index: 25
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses a critical clinical need for accurate small lesion detection in brain tumor treatment, though it appears incremental with mixed results from some components.

The paper tackles the problem of detecting and segmenting small brain metastases in MRI scans, which are often missed by existing methods, and achieves competitive results in the ASNR-MICCAI BraTS Brain Metastasis Challenge 2023 through an ensemble approach with specialized losses and postprocessing.

Brain metastases (BMs) are the most frequently occurring brain tumors. The treatment of patients having multiple BMs with stereo tactic radiosurgery necessitates accurate localization of the metastases. Neural networks can assist in this time-consuming and costly task that is typically performed by human experts. Particularly challenging is the detection of small lesions since they are often underrepresented in exist ing approaches. Yet, lesion detection is equally important for all sizes. In this work, we develop an ensemble of neural networks explicitly fo cused on detecting and segmenting small BMs. To accomplish this task, we trained several neural networks focusing on individual aspects of the BM segmentation problem: We use blob loss that specifically addresses the imbalance of lesion instances in terms of size and texture and is, therefore, not biased towards larger lesions. In addition, a model using a subtraction sequence between the T1 and T1 contrast-enhanced sequence focuses on low-contrast lesions. Furthermore, we train additional models only on small lesions. Our experiments demonstrate the utility of the ad ditional blob loss and the subtraction sequence. However, including the specialized small lesion models in the ensemble deteriorates segmentation results. We also find domain-knowledge-inspired postprocessing steps to drastically increase our performance in most experiments. Our approach enables us to submit a competitive challenge entry to the ASNR-MICCAI BraTS Brain Metastasis Challenge 2023.

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