FPL+: Filtered Pseudo Label-Based Unsupervised Cross-Modality Adaptation for 3D Medical Image Segmentation.

Journal: IEEE transactions on medical imaging
Published Date:

Abstract

Adapting a medical image segmentation model to a new domain is important for improving its cross-domain transferability, and due to the expensive annotation process, Unsupervised Domain Adaptation (UDA) is appealing where only unlabeled images are needed for the adaptation. Existing UDA methods are mainly based on image or feature alignment with adversarial training for regularization, and they are limited by insufficient supervision in the target domain. In this paper, we propose an enhanced Filtered Pseudo Label (FPL+)-based UDA method for 3D medical image segmentation. It first uses cross-domain data augmentation to translate labeled images in the source domain to a dual-domain training set consisting of a pseudo source-domain set and a pseudo target-domain set. To leverage the dual-domain augmented images to train a pseudo label generator, domain-specific batch normalization layers are used to deal with the domain shift while learning the domain-invariant structure features, generating high-quality pseudo labels for target-domain images. We then combine labeled source-domain images and target-domain images with pseudo labels to train a final segmentor, where image-level weighting based on uncertainty estimation and pixel-level weighting based on dual-domain consensus are proposed to mitigate the adverse effect of noisy pseudo labels. Experiments on three public multi-modal datasets for Vestibular Schwannoma, brain tumor and whole heart segmentation show that our method surpassed ten state-of-the-art UDA methods, and it even achieved better results than fully supervised learning in the target domain in some cases.

Authors

  • Jianghao Wu
    Dongguan Guangming Ophthalmic Hospital, Dongguan, China.
  • Dong Guo
    College of Electrical Engineering, Zhejiang University of Water Resources and Electric Power, Hangzhou, 310018, China.
  • Guotai Wang
    Wellcome / EPSRC Centre for Interventional and Surgical Sciences (WEISS), University College London, UK.
  • Qiang Yue
    Department of Radiology, West China Hospital of Sichuan University, Chengdu, China.
  • Huijun Yu
  • Kang Li
    Department of Otolaryngology, Longgang Otolaryngology hospital & Shenzhen Key Laboratory of Otolaryngology, Shenzhen Institute of Otolaryngology, Shenzhen, Guangdong, China.
  • Shaoting Zhang