StAC-DA: Structure aware cross-modality domain adaptation framework with image and feature-level adaptation for medical image segmentation

StAC-DA:一种基于结构感知、跨模态的领域自适应框架,可进行图像级和特征级自适应,用于医学图像分割

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have achieved state-of-the-art results in various medical image segmentation tasks. However, CNNs often assume that the source and target dataset follow the same probability distribution and when this assumption is not satisfied their performance degrades significantly. This poses a limitation in medical image analysis, where including information from different imaging modalities can bring large clinical benefits. In this work, we present an unsupervised Structure Aware Cross-modality Domain Adaptation (StAC-DA) framework for medical image segmentation. METHODS: StAC-DA implements an image- and feature-level adaptation in a sequential two-step approach. The first step performs an image-level alignment, where images from the source domain are translated to the target domain in pixel space by implementing a CycleGAN-based model. The latter model includes a structure-aware network that preserves the shape of the anatomical structure during translation. The second step consists of a feature-level alignment. A U-Net network with deep supervision is trained with the transformed source domain images and target domain images in an adversarial manner to produce probable segmentations for the target domain. RESULTS: The framework is evaluated on bidirectional cardiac substructure segmentation. StAC-DA outperforms leading unsupervised domain adaptation approaches, being ranked first in the segmentation of the ascending aorta when adapting from Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) to Computed Tomography (CT) domain and from CT to MRI domain. CONCLUSIONS: The presented framework overcomes the limitations posed by differing distributions in training and testing datasets. Moreover, the experimental results highlight its potential to improve the accuracy of medical image segmentation across diverse imaging modalities.

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