Frontiers in Medicine (Nov 2021)

Segmentation of Cerebral Small Vessel Diseases-White Matter Hyperintensities Based on a Deep Learning System

  • Wei Shan,
  • Wei Shan,
  • Wei Shan,
  • Yunyun Duan,
  • Yu Zheng,
  • Zhenzhou Wu,
  • Shang Wei Chan,
  • Qun Wang,
  • Qun Wang,
  • Qun Wang,
  • Peiyi Gao,
  • Yaou Liu,
  • Kunlun He,
  • Kunlun He,
  • Yongjun Wang,
  • Yongjun Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2021.681183
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

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Objective: Reliable quantification of white matter hyperintensities (WHMs) resulting from cerebral small vessel diseases (CSVD) is essential for understanding their clinical impact. We aim to develop and clinically validate a deep learning system for automatic segmentation of CSVD-WMH from fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) imaging using large multicenter data.Method: A FLAIR imaging dataset of 1,156 patients diagnosed with CSVD associated WMH (median age, 54 years; 653 males) obtained between September 2018 and September 2019 from Beijing Tiantan Hospital was retrospectively analyzed in this study. Locations of CSVD-WMH on the FLAIR scans were manually marked by two experienced neurologists. Using the manually labeled data of 996 patients (development set), a U-shaped novel 2D convolutional neural network (CNN) architecture was trained for automatic segmentation of CSVD-WMH. The segmentation performance of the network was evaluated with per pixel and lesion level dice scores using an independent internal test set (n = 160) and a multi-center external test set (n = 90, three medical centers). The clinical suitability of the segmentation results, classified as acceptable, acceptable with minor revision, acceptable with major revision, and not acceptable, was analyzed by three independent neuroradiologists. The inter-neuroradiologists agreement rate was assessed by the Kendall-W test.Results: On the internal and external test sets, the proposed CNN architecture achieved per pixel and lesion level dice scores of 0.72 (external test set), and they were significantly better than the state-of-the-art deep learning architectures proposed for WMH segmentation. In the clinical evaluation, neuroradiologists observed the segmentation results for 95% of the patients were acceptable or acceptable with a minor revision.Conclusions: A deep learning system can be used for automated, objective, and clinically meaningful segmentation of CSVD-WMH with high accuracy.

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