Paper
15 March 2019 Pseudo-CT image generation from mDixon MRI images using fully convolutional neural networks
J. V. Stadelmann, H. Schulz, U. A. van der Heide, S. Renisch
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Abstract
Generating pseudo-CT images from MRI provides electron density maps for radiation therapy planning and saves additional CT scans. Fully convolutional neural networks were proposed for pseudo-CT generation. We investigated the influence of architectures and hyperparameters on the quality of the pseudo-CT images. We used fully convolutional neural networks to transform between registered MRI and CT volumes of the pelvic region: two UNet variants using transposed convolutions or bilinear upsampling, LinkNet using residual blocks and strided convolutions for downsampling, and we designed transnet to maintain tensor spatial dimensions equal to the image’s size. Different architectures revealed similar error metrics, although pseudo-CTs differ visually. Comparison of LinkNet and UNet showed that downsampling does not affect translation. Replacing transposed convolutions with bilinear upsampling improved the pseudo-CTs’ sharpness. Translation quality quickly saturates with the number of convolution layers; increasing the number of layers from 4 to 19 decreases the MAE from 44HU to 37HU. Varying the number of feature maps showed that good translation quality can be achieved with networks that are substantially narrower than those previously published. Generally, the pseudo-CT have MAE lower than 45HU, computed inside of the true CT’s body shape.
© (2019) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
J. V. Stadelmann, H. Schulz, U. A. van der Heide, and S. Renisch "Pseudo-CT image generation from mDixon MRI images using fully convolutional neural networks", Proc. SPIE 10953, Medical Imaging 2019: Biomedical Applications in Molecular, Structural, and Functional Imaging, 109530Z (15 March 2019); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2512741
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Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Magnetic resonance imaging

Convolution

Computed tomography

Radiotherapy

Convolutional neural networks

Image segmentation

Visualization

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