BMC Medical Imaging (May 2024)

Compensation of small data with large filters for accurate liver vessel segmentation from contrast-enhanced CT images

  • Wen Chen,
  • Liang Zhao,
  • Rongrong Bian,
  • Qingzhou Li,
  • Xueting Zhao,
  • Ming Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12880-024-01309-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Background Segmenting liver vessels from contrast-enhanced computed tomography images is essential for diagnosing liver diseases, planning surgeries and delivering radiotherapy. Nevertheless, identifying vessels is a challenging task due to the tiny cross-sectional areas occupied by vessels, which has posed great challenges for vessel segmentation, such as limited features to be learned and difficult to construct high-quality as well as large-volume data. Methods We present an approach that only requires a few labeled vessels but delivers significantly improved results. Our model starts with vessel enhancement by fading out liver intensity and generates candidate vessels by a classifier fed with a large number of image filters. Afterwards, the initial segmentation is refined using Markov random fields. Results In experiments on the well-known dataset 3D-IRCADb, the averaged Dice coefficient is lifted to 0.63, and the mean sensitivity is increased to 0.71. These results are significantly better than those obtained from existing machine-learning approaches and comparable to those generated from deep-learning models. Conclusion Sophisticated integration of a large number of filters is able to pinpoint effective features from liver images that are sufficient to distinguish vessels from other liver tissues under a scarcity of large-volume labeled data. The study can shed light on medical image segmentation, especially for those without sufficient data.

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