Diagnostics (Jun 2024)
Automatic Segmentation of Type A Aortic Dissection on Computed Tomography Images Using Deep Learning Approach
Abstract
Purpose: Type A aortic dissection (TAAD) is a life-threatening aortic disease. The tear involves the ascending aorta and progresses into the separation of the layers of the aortic wall and the occurrence of a false lumen. Accurate segmentation of TAAD could provide assistance for disease assessment and guidance for clinical treatment. Methods: This study applied nnU-Net, a state-of-the-art biomedical segmentation network architecture, to segment contrast-enhanced CT images and quantify the morphological features for TAAD. CT datasets were acquired from 24 patients with TAAD. Manual segmentation and annotation of the CT images was used as the ground-truth. Two-dimensional (2D) nnU-Net and three-dimensional (3D) nnU-Net architectures with Dice- and cross entropy-based loss functions were utilized to segment the true lumen (TL), false lumen (FL), and intimal flap on the images. Four-fold cross validation was performed to evaluate the performance of the two nnU-Net architectures. Six metrics, including accuracy, precision, recall, Intersection of Union, Dice similarity coefficient (DSC), and Hausdorff distance, were calculated to evaluate the performance of the 2D and 3D nnU-Net algorithms in TAAD datasets. Aortic morphological features from both 2D and 3D nnU-Net algorithms were quantified based on the segmented results and compared. Results: Overall, 3D nnU-Net architectures had better performance in TAAD CT datasets, with TL and FL segmentation accuracy up to 99.9%. The DSCs of TLs and FLs based on the 3D nnU-Net were 88.42% and 87.10%. For the aortic TL and FL diameters, the FL area calculated from the segmentation results of the 3D nnU-Net architecture had smaller relative errors (3.89–6.80%), compared to the 2D nnU-Net architecture (relative errors: 4.35–9.48%). Conclusions: The nnU-Net architectures may serve as a basis for automatic segmentation and quantification of TAAD, which could aid in rapid diagnosis, surgical planning, and subsequent biomechanical simulation of the aorta.
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