CT slice alignment to whole-body reference geometry by convolutional neural network.

Journal: Physical and engineering sciences in medicine
Published Date:

Abstract

Volumetric medical imaging lacks a standardised coordinate geometry which links image frame-of-reference to specific anatomical regions. This results in an inability to locate anatomy in medical images without visual assessment and precludes a variety of image analysis tasks which could benefit from a standardised, machine-readable coordinate system. In this work, a proposed geometric system that scales based on patient size is described and applied to a variety of cases in computed tomography imaging. Subsequently, a convolutional neural network is trained to associate axial slice CT image appearance with the standardised coordinate value along the patient superior-inferior axis. The trained neural network showed an accuracy of ± 12 mm in the ability to predict per-slice reference location and was relatively stable across all annotated regions ranging from brain to thighs. A version of the trained model along with scripts to perform network training in other applications are made available. Finally, a selection of potential use applications are illustrated including organ localisation, image registration initialisation, and scan length determination for auditing diagnostic reference levels.

Authors

  • Price Jackson
    Department of Oncology, Sir Peter MacCallum, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
  • James Korte
    Department of Physical Sciences, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, 3000, Australia.
  • Lachlan McIntosh
    Department of Physical Sciences, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, 3000, Australia.
  • Tomas Kron
    Department of Oncology, Sir Peter MacCallum, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
  • Jason Ellul
    Department of Research Computing, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, 3000, Australia.
  • Jason Li
    Department of Bioinformatics, Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco, California.
  • Nicholas Hardcastle
    Department of Physical Sciences, Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.