Pelvic Organ Segmentation Using Distinctive Curve Guided Fully Convolutional Networks.

Journal: IEEE transactions on medical imaging
Published Date:

Abstract

Accurate segmentation of pelvic organs (i.e., prostate, bladder, and rectum) from CT image is crucial for effective prostate cancer radiotherapy. However, it is a challenging task due to: 1) low soft tissue contrast in CT images and 2) large shape and appearance variations of pelvic organs. In this paper, we employ a two-stage deep learning-based method, with a novel distinctive curve-guided fully convolutional network (FCN), to solve the aforementioned challenges. Specifically, the first stage is for fast and robust organ detection in the raw CT images. It is designed as a coarse segmentation network to provide region proposals for three pelvic organs. The second stage is for fine segmentation of each organ, based on the region proposal results. To better identify those indistinguishable pelvic organ boundaries, a novel morphological representation, namely, distinctive curve, is also introduced to help better conduct the precise segmentation. To implement this, in this second stage, a multi-task FCN is initially utilized to learn the distinctive curve and the segmentation map separately and then combine these two tasks to produce accurate segmentation map. The final segmentation results of all three pelvic organs are generated by a weighted max-voting strategy. We have conducted exhaustive experiments on a large and diverse pelvic CT data set for evaluating our proposed method. The experimental results demonstrate that our proposed method is accurate and robust for this challenging segmentation task, by also outperforming the state-of-the-art segmentation methods.

Authors

  • Kelei He
  • Xiaohuan Cao
    School of Automation, Northwestern Polytechnical University, Xi'an, China.
  • Yinghuan Shi
    National Institute of Healthcare Data Science, Nanjing University, Nanjing, China.
  • Dong Nie
    Department of Radiology and BRIC, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, USA; Department of Computer Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, USA.
  • Yang Gao
    State Key Laboratory of Bioactive Substance and Function of Natural Medicines, Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Medical Science and Peking Union Medical College, Beijing 100050, China.
  • Dinggang Shen
    School of Biomedical Engineering, ShanghaiTech University, Shanghai, China.