학술논문

Leveraging Clinically Relevant Biometric Constraints to Supervise a Deep Learning Model for the Accurate Caliper Placement to Obtain Sonographic Measurements of the Fetal Brain
Document Type
Conference
Source
2022 IEEE 19th International Symposium on Biomedical Imaging (ISBI) Biomedical Imaging (ISBI), 2022 IEEE 19th International Symposium on. :1-5 Mar, 2022
Subject
Bioengineering
Computing and Processing
Photonics and Electrooptics
Signal Processing and Analysis
Deep learning
Training
TV
Biometrics (access control)
Ultrasonic variables measurement
Computational modeling
Biological system modeling
fetal brain
ultrasound
caliper placement
landmark detection
deep learning
Language
ISSN
1945-8452
Abstract
Multiple studies have demonstrated that obtaining standardized fetal brain biometry from mid-trimester ultrasonography (USG) examination is key for the reliable assessment of fetal neurodevelopment and the screening of central nervous system (CNS) anomalies. Obtaining these measurements is highly subjective, expertise-driven, and requires years of training experience, limiting quality prenatal care for all pregnant mothers. In this study, we propose a deep learning (DL) approach to compute 3 key fetal brain biometry from the 2D USG images of the transcerebellar plane (TC) through the accurate and automated caliper placement (2 per biometry) by modeling it as a landmark detection problem. We leveraged clinically relevant biometric constraints (relationship between caliper points) and domain-relevant data augmentation to improve the accuracy of a U-Net DL model (trained/tested on: 596 images, 473 subjects/143 images, 143 subjects). We performed multiple experiments demonstrating the effect of the DL backbone, data augmentation, generalizability and benchmarked against a recent state-of-the-art approach through extensive clinical validation (DL vs. 7 experienced clinicians). For all cases, the mean errors in the placement of the individual caliper points and the computed biometry were comparable to error rates among clinicians. The clinical translation of the proposed framework can assist novice users from low-resource settings in the reliable and standardized assessment of fetal brain sonograms.