Automated stroke lesion segmentation in non-contrast CT scans using dense multi-path contextual generative adversarial network.

Journal: Physics in medicine and biology
Published Date:

Abstract

Stroke lesion volume is a key radiologic measurement in assessing prognosis of acute ischemic stroke (AIS) patients. The aim of this paper is to develop an automated segmentation method for accurately segmenting follow-up ischemic and hemorrhagic lesion from multislice non-contrast CT (NCCT) volumes of AIS patients. This paper proposes a 2D dense multi-path contextual generative adversarial network (MPC-GAN) where a dense multi-path 2D U-Net is utilized as the generator and a discriminator network is applied to regularize the generator. Contextual information (i.e. bilateral intensity difference, distance map and lesion location probability) are input into the generator and discriminator. The proposed method is validated separately on follow-up NCCT volumes of 60 patients with ischemic infarcts and NCCT volumes of 70 patients with hemorrhages. Quantitative results demonstrated that the proposed MPC-GAN method obtained a Dice coefficient (DC) of 70.6% for ischemic infarct segmentation and a DC of 76.5% for hemorrhage segmentation compared with manual segmented lesions, outperforming several benchmark methods. Additional volumetric analyses demonstrated that the MPC-GAN segmented lesion volume correlated well with manual measurements (Pearson correlation coefficients were 0.926 and 0.927 for ischemic infarcts and hemorrhages, respectively). The proposed MPC-GAN method can accurately segment ischemic infarcts and hemorrhages from NCCT volumes of AIS patients.

Authors

  • Hulin Kuang
    From the Calgary Stroke Program, Departments of Clinical Neurosciences (W.Q., H.K., E.T., J.M.O., M.G., M.D.H., A.M.D., B.K.M.), Radiology (M.G., M.D.H., A.M.D., B.K.M.), and Community Health Sciences (M.D.H., B.K.M.), University of Calgary, 239 Strathridge Pl SW, Calgary, AB, Canada T3H 4J2; Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Calgary, Alberta, Canada (M.G., M.D.H., A.M.D., B.K.M.), Department of Neurology, Keimyung University, Daegu, South Korea (S.I.S.); and Division of Neuroradiology, Clinic of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Basel, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland (J.M.O.).
  • Bijoy K Menon
    Calgary Stroke Program, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
  • Wu Qiu
    From the Calgary Stroke Program, Departments of Clinical Neurosciences (W.Q., H.K., E.T., J.M.O., M.G., M.D.H., A.M.D., B.K.M.), Radiology (M.G., M.D.H., A.M.D., B.K.M.), and Community Health Sciences (M.D.H., B.K.M.), University of Calgary, 239 Strathridge Pl SW, Calgary, AB, Canada T3H 4J2; Hotchkiss Brain Institute, Calgary, Alberta, Canada (M.G., M.D.H., A.M.D., B.K.M.), Department of Neurology, Keimyung University, Daegu, South Korea (S.I.S.); and Division of Neuroradiology, Clinic of Radiology and Nuclear Medicine, University Hospital Basel, University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland (J.M.O.).