BMC Medical Imaging (Oct 2020)

Utility of deep learning networks for the generation of artificial cardiac magnetic resonance images in congenital heart disease

  • Gerhard-Paul Diller,
  • Julius Vahle,
  • Robert Radke,
  • Maria Luisa Benesch Vidal,
  • Alicia Jeanette Fischer,
  • Ulrike M. M. Bauer,
  • Samir Sarikouch,
  • Felix Berger,
  • Philipp Beerbaum,
  • Helmut Baumgartner,
  • Stefan Orwat,
  • for the German Competence Network for Congenital Heart Defects Investigators

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12880-020-00511-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Background Deep learning algorithms are increasingly used for automatic medical imaging analysis and cardiac chamber segmentation. Especially in congenital heart disease, obtaining a sufficient number of training images and data anonymity issues remain of concern. Methods Progressive generative adversarial networks (PG-GAN) were trained on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) frames from a nationwide prospective study to generate synthetic MRI frames. These synthetic frames were subsequently used to train segmentation networks (U-Net) and the quality of the synthetic training images, as well as the performance of the segmentation network was compared to U-Net-based solutions trained entirely on patient data. Results Cardiac MRI data from 303 patients with Tetralogy of Fallot were used for PG-GAN training. Using this model, we generated 100,000 synthetic images with a resolution of 256 × 256 pixels in 4-chamber and 2-chamber views. All synthetic samples were classified as anatomically plausible by human observers. The segmentation performance of the U-Net trained on data from 42 separate patients was statistically significantly better compared to the PG-GAN based training in an external dataset of 50 patients, however, the actual difference in segmentation quality was negligible (< 1% in absolute terms for all models). Conclusion We demonstrate the utility of PG-GANs for generating large amounts of realistically looking cardiac MRI images even in rare cardiac conditions. The generated images are not subject to data anonymity and privacy concerns and can be shared freely between institutions. Training supervised deep learning segmentation networks on this synthetic data yielded similar results compared to direct training on original patient data.