Poster + Paper
4 April 2022 Automated segmentation of pediatric brain tumors based on multi-parametric MRI and deep learning
Author Affiliations +
Conference Poster
Abstract
Background: Brain tumors are the most common solid tumors in children, and high-grade brain tumors are the leading cause of cancer-related death among all childhood cancers. Tumor segmentation is essential for surgical planning, treatment planning, and radiomics studies, but manual segmentation is time-consuming and has high interoperator variability. This paper presents a deep learning-based method for automated segmentation of pediatric brain tumors based on multi-parametric MRI. Methods: Multi-parametric MRI (MP-MRI) scans (T1, T1w-Gd, T2, and FLAIR) of 167 pediatric patients with de novo brain tumors, including a variety of tumor subtypes, were processed and manually segmented according to Response Assessment in Pediatric Neuro-Oncology (RAPNO) guidelines into five tumor subregions, i.e., enhancing tumor (ET), non-enhancing tumor (NET), cystic core (CC), cystic reactive (CR), and peritumoral edema (ED). Segmentations were revised and approved by experienced neuroradiologists and used as the ground truth (GT). The cohort was split into training (n=134) and independent test (n=33) subsets. DeepMedic, a three-dimensional convolutional neural network, was trained with 7-fold cross-validation, and the model’s parameters were tuned. Finally, the network was evaluated on the withheld test cohort, and its performance was assessed in comparison with GT segmentations. Results: Dice similarity score (mean+/-SD) was 0.71+/-0.28 for the whole tumor (union of all five subregions), 0.66+/- 0.30 for ET, 0.31+/-0.26 for NET, 0.34+/-0.38 for CC, 0.55+/-0.50 for CR, and 0.32+/-0.42 for ED. Conclusion: This model displayed good performance on segmentation of the whole tumor region of pediatric brain tumors and can facilitate detection of abnormal region for further clinical measurements.
© (2022) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Rachel Madhogarhia, Anahita Fathi Kazerooni, Sherjeel Arif, Jeffrey B. Ware, Ariana M. Familiar, Lorenna Vidal, Sina Bagheri, Hannah Anderson, Debanjan Haldar, Sophie Yagoda, Erin Graves, Michael Spadola, Rachel Yan, Nadia Dahmane, Chiharu Sako, Arastoo Vossough, Phillip Storm, Adam Resnick, Christos Davatzikos, and Ali Nabavizadeh "Automated segmentation of pediatric brain tumors based on multi-parametric MRI and deep learning", Proc. SPIE 12033, Medical Imaging 2022: Computer-Aided Diagnosis, 120332R (4 April 2022); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2611551
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Tumors

Image segmentation

Brain

Neuroimaging

Tissues

Machine learning

Back to Top