학술논문

Using Uncertainty in Deep Learning Reconstruction for Cone-Beam CT of the Brain
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Physics - Medical Physics
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing
Language
Abstract
Contrast resolution beyond the limits of conventional cone-beam CT (CBCT) systems is essential to high-quality imaging of the brain. We present a deep learning reconstruction method (dubbed DL-Recon) that integrates physically principled reconstruction models with DL-based image synthesis based on the statistical uncertainty in the synthesis image. A synthesis network was developed to generate a synthesized CBCT image (DL-Synthesis) from an uncorrected filtered back-projection (FBP) image. To improve generalizability (including accurate representation of lesions not seen in training), voxel-wise epistemic uncertainty of DL-Synthesis was computed using a Bayesian inference technique (Monte-Carlo dropout). In regions of high uncertainty, the DL-Recon method incorporates information from a physics-based reconstruction model and artifact-corrected projection data. Two forms of the DL-Recon method are proposed: (i) image-domain fusion of DL-Synthesis and FBP (DL-FBP) weighted by DL uncertainty; and (ii) a model-based iterative image reconstruction (MBIR) optimization using DL-Synthesis to compute a spatially varying regularization term based on DL uncertainty (DL-MBIR). The error in DL-Synthesis images was correlated with the uncertainty in the synthesis estimate. Compared to FBP and PWLS, the DL-Recon methods (both DL-FBP and DL-MBIR) showed ~50% reduction in noise (at matched spatial resolution) and ~40-70% improvement in image uniformity. Conventional DL-Synthesis alone exhibited ~10-60% under-estimation of lesion contrast and ~5-40% reduction in lesion segmentation accuracy (Dice coefficient) in simulated and real brain lesions, suggesting a lack of reliability / generalizability for structures unseen in the training data. DL-FBP and DL-MBIR improved the accuracy of reconstruction by directly incorporating information from the measurements in regions of high uncertainty.
Comment: This work was presented at the 16th International Meeting on Fully Three-Dimensional Image Reconstruction in Radiology and Nuclear Medicine (Fully3D), July 19-23, 2021, Leuven, Belgium