The Impact of Fatty Infiltration on MRI Segmentation of Lower Limb Muscles in Neuromuscular Diseases: A Comparative Study of Deep Learning Approaches

Archive ouverte

Hostin, Marc‐adrien | Ogier, Augustin C. | Michel, Constance P. | Le Fur, Yann | Guye, Maxime | Attarian, Shahram | Fortanier, Etienne | Bellemare, Marc‐Emmanuel | Bendahan, David

Edité par CCSD ; Wiley-Blackwell -

International audience. Background Deep learning methods have been shown to be useful for segmentation of lower limb muscle MRIs of healthy subjects but, have not been sufficiently evaluated on neuromuscular disease (NDM) patients. Purpose Evaluate the influence of fat infiltration on convolutional neural network (CNN) segmentation of MRIs from NMD patients. Study Type Retrospective study. Subjects Data were collected from a hospital database of 67 patients with NMDs and 14 controls (age: 53 ± 17 years, sex: 48 M, 33 F). Ten individual muscles were segmented from the thigh and six from the calf (20 slices, 200 cm section). Field Strength/Sequence A 1.5 T. Sequences: 2D T 1 ‐weighted fast spin echo. Fat fraction (FF): three‐point Dixon 3D GRE, magnetization transfer ratio (MTR): 3D MT‐prepared GRE, T2: 2D multispin‐echo sequence. Assessment U‐Net 2D, U‐Net 3D, TransUNet, and HRNet were trained to segment thigh and leg muscles (101/11 and 95/11 training/validation images, 10‐fold cross‐validation). Automatic and manual segmentations were compared based on geometric criteria (Dice coefficient [DSC], outlier rate, absence rate) and reliability of measured MRI quantities (FF, MTR, T2, volume). Statistical Tests Bland–Altman plots were chosen to describe agreement between manual vs. automatic estimated FF, MTR, T2 and volume. Comparisons were made between muscle populations with an FF greater than 20% (G20+) and lower than 20% (G20−). Results The CNNs achieved equivalent results, yet only HRNet recognized every muscle in the database, with a DSC of 0.91 ± 0.08, and measurement biases reaching −0.32% ± 0.92% for FF, 0.19 ± 0.77 for MTR, −0.55 ± 1.95 msec for T2, and − 0.38 ± 3.67 cm 3 for volume. The performances of HRNet, between G20− and G20+ decreased significantly. Data Conclusion HRNet was the most appropriate network, as it did not omit any muscle. The accuracy obtained shows that CNNs could provide fully automated methods for studying NMDs. However, the accuracy of the methods may be degraded on the most infiltrated muscles (>20%). Evidence Level 4. Technical Efficacy Stage 1.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Quantitative muscle MRI combined with AI-based segmentation as a follow-up biomarker for ATTRv patients: A longitudinal pilot study

Archive ouverte | Fortanier, Etienne | CCSD

International audience. Background and ObjectivesIntramuscular fat fraction (FF), assessed using quantitative MRI (qMRI), has emerged as a promising biomarker for hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRv) patient...

Overview of MR Image Segmentation Strategies in Neuromuscular Disorders

Archive ouverte | Ogier, Augustin C. | CCSD

International audience. Neuromuscular disorders are rare diseases for which few therapeutic strategies currently exist. Assessment of therapeutic strategies efficiency is limited by the lack of biomarkers sensitive ...

Comparison of Manual vs Artificial Intelligence–Based Muscle MRI Segmentation for Evaluating Disease Progression in Patients With CMT1A

Archive ouverte | Fortanier, Etienne | CCSD

International audience. Background and Objectives: Intramuscular fat fraction (FF), assessed with quantitative MRI (qMRI), has emerged as one of the few responsive outcome measures in CMT1A patients. The main limita...

Chargement des enrichissements...