A Deep Learning Framework for Skull Stripping in Brain MRI.

Journal: Annual International Conference of the IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society. Annual International Conference
PMID:

Abstract

Skull-stripping, an important pre-processing step in neuroimage computing, involves the automated removal of non-brain anatomy (such as the skull, eyes, and ears) from brain images to facilitate brain segmentation and analysis. Manual segmentation is still practiced, but it is time-consuming and highly dependent on the expertise of clinicians or image analysts. Prior studies have developed various skull-stripping algorithms that perform well on brains with mild or no structural abnormalities. Nonetheless, they were not able to address the issue for brains with significant morphological changes, such as those caused by brain tumors, particularly when the tumors are located near the skull's border. In such cases, a portion of the normal brain may be stripped, or the reverse may occur during skull stripping. To address this limitation, we propose to use a novel deep learning framework based on nnUNet for skull stripping in brain MRI. Two publicly available datasets were used to evaluate the proposed method, including a normal brain MRI dataset - The Neurofeedback Skull-stripped Repository (NFBS), and a brain tumor MRI dataset - The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA). The method proposed in the study performed better than six other current methods, namely BSE, ROBEX, UNet, SC-UNet, MV-UNet, and 3D U-Net. The proposed method achieved an average Dice coefficient of 0.9960, a sensitivity of 0.9999, and a specificity of 0.9996 on the NFBS dataset, and an average Dice coefficient of 0.9296, a sensitivity of 0.9288, a specificity of 0.9866 and an accuracy of 0.9762 on the TCGA brain tumor dataset.

Authors

  • Mehnaz Tabassum
  • Abdulla Al Suman
  • Carlo Russo
    Computational NeuroSurgery (CNS) Lab, Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
  • Antonio Di Ieva
    Neurosurgery Unit, Department of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia.
  • Sidong Liu
    Save Sight Institute, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia; Brain and Mind Centre, Sydney Medical School, The University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia.