4.6 Article

Image-to-image generative adversarial networks for synthesizing perfusion parameter maps from DSC-MR images in cerebrovascular disease

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FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY
卷 13, 期 -, 页码 -

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FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.1051397

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stroke; perfusion-weighted imaging; dynamic susceptibility contrast MR imaging (DSC-MR imaging); cerebrovascular disease; generative adversarial network (GAN)

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Stroke is a leading cause of death or disability. We propose a modified pix2pix GAN with a temporal component (temp-pix2pix-GAN) that automates the generation of expert-level perfusion maps. Our model shows high performance on acute stroke and steno-occlusive disease datasets, marking an important step towards fast patient stratification.
Stroke is a major cause of death or disability. As imaging-based patient stratification improves acute stroke therapy, dynamic susceptibility contrast magnetic resonance imaging (DSC-MRI) is of major interest in image brain perfusion. However, expert-level perfusion maps require a manual or semi-manual post-processing by a medical expert making the procedure time-consuming and less-standardized. Modern machine learning methods such as generative adversarial networks (GANs) have the potential to automate the perfusion map generation on an expert level without manual validation. We propose a modified pix2pix GAN with a temporal component (temp-pix2pix-GAN) that generates perfusion maps in an end-to-end fashion. We train our model on perfusion maps infused with expert knowledge to encode it into the GANs. The performance was trained and evaluated using the structural similarity index measure (SSIM) on two datasets including patients with acute stroke and the steno-occlusive disease. Our temp-pix2pix architecture showed high performance on the acute stroke dataset for all perfusion maps (mean SSIM 0.92-0.99) and good performance on data including patients with the steno-occlusive disease (mean SSIM 0.84-0.99). While clinical validation is still necessary for future studies, our results mark an important step toward automated expert-level perfusion maps and thus fast patient stratification.

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