PurposeAccurate segmentation of liver and liver tumors is critical for radiotherapy. Liver tumor segmentation, however, remains a difficult and relevant problem in the field of medical image processing because of the various factors like complex and variable location, size, and shape of liver tumors, low contrast between tumors and normal tissues, and blurred or difficult-to-define lesion boundaries. In this paper, we proposed a neural network (S-Net) that can incorporate attention mechanisms to end-to-end segmentation of liver tumors from CT images.MethodsFirst, this study adopted a classical coding-decoding structure to realize end-to-end segmentation. Next, we introduced an attention mechanism between the contraction path and the expansion path so that the network could encode a longer range of semantic information in the local features and find the corresponding relationship between different channels. Then, we introduced long-hop connections between the layers of the contraction path and the expansion path, so that the semantic information extracted in both paths could be fused. Finally, the application of closed operation was used to dissipate the narrow interruptions and long, thin divide. This eliminated small cavities and produced a noise reduction effect.ResultsIn this paper, we used the MICCAI 2017 liver tumor segmentation (LiTS) challenge dataset, 3DIRCADb dataset and doctors’ manual contours of Hubei Cancer Hospital dataset to test the network architecture. We calculated the Dice Global (DG) score, Dice per Case (DC) score, volumetric overlap error (VOE), average symmetric surface distance (ASSD), and root mean square error (RMSE) to evaluate the accuracy of the architecture for liver tumor segmentation. The segmentation DG for tumor was found to be 0.7555, DC was 0.613, VOE was 0.413, ASSD was 1.186 and RMSE was 1.804. For a small tumor, DG was 0.3246 and DC was 0.3082. For a large tumor, DG was 0.7819 and DC was 0.7632.ConclusionS-Net obtained more semantic information with the introduction of an attention mechanism and long jump connection. Experimental results showed that this method effectively improved the effect of tumor recognition in CT images and could be applied to assist doctors in clinical treatment.
Purpose/Objective(s): With the development of deep learning, more convolutional neural networks (CNNs) are being introduced in automatic segmentation to reduce oncologists’ labor requirement. However, it is still challenging for oncologists to spend considerable time evaluating the quality of the contours generated by the CNNs. Besides, all the evaluation criteria, such as Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC), need a gold standard to assess the quality of the contours. To address these problems, we propose an automatic quality assurance (QA) method using isotropic and anisotropic methods to automatically analyze contour quality without a gold standard. Materials/Methods: We used 196 individuals with 18 different head-and-neck organs-at-risk. The overall process has the following 4 main steps. (1) Use CNN segmentation network to generate a series of contours, then use these contours as organ masks to erode and dilate to generate inner/outer shells for each 2D slice. (2) Thirty-eight radiomics features were extracted from these 2 shells, using the inner/outer shells’ radiomics features ratios and DSCs as the input for 12 machine learning models. (3) Using the DSC threshold adaptively classified the passing/un-passing slices. (4) Through 2 different threshold analysis methods quantitatively evaluated the un-passing slices and obtained a series of location information of poor contours. Parts 1-3 were isotropic experiments, and part 4 was the anisotropic method. Result: From the isotropic experiments, almost all the predicted values were close to the labels. Through the anisotropic method, we obtained the contours’ location information by assessing the thresholds of the peak-to-peak and area-to-area ratios. Conclusion: The proposed automatic segmentation QA method could predict the segmentation quality qualitatively. Moreover, the method can analyze the location information for un-passing slices.
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