Scientific Reports (Sep 2022)

Deep neural networks allow expert-level brain meningioma segmentation and present potential for improvement of clinical practice

  • Alessandro Boaro,
  • Jakub R. Kaczmarzyk,
  • Vasileios K. Kavouridis,
  • Maya Harary,
  • Marco Mammi,
  • Hassan Dawood,
  • Alice Shea,
  • Elise Y. Cho,
  • Parikshit Juvekar,
  • Thomas Noh,
  • Aakanksha Rana,
  • Satrajit Ghosh,
  • Omar Arnaout

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-19356-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Accurate brain meningioma segmentation and volumetric assessment are critical for serial patient follow-up, surgical planning and monitoring response to treatment. Current gold standard of manual labeling is a time-consuming process, subject to inter-user variability. Fully-automated algorithms for meningioma segmentation have the potential to bring volumetric analysis into clinical and research workflows by increasing accuracy and efficiency, reducing inter-user variability and saving time. Previous research has focused solely on segmentation tasks without assessment of impact and usability of deep learning solutions in clinical practice. Herein, we demonstrate a three-dimensional convolutional neural network (3D-CNN) that performs expert-level, automated meningioma segmentation and volume estimation on MRI scans. A 3D-CNN was initially trained by segmenting entire brain volumes using a dataset of 10,099 healthy brain MRIs. Using transfer learning, the network was then specifically trained on meningioma segmentation using 806 expert-labeled MRIs. The final model achieved a median performance of 88.2% reaching the spectrum of current inter-expert variability (82.6–91.6%). We demonstrate in a simulated clinical scenario that a deep learning approach to meningioma segmentation is feasible, highly accurate and has the potential to improve current clinical practice.