Scientific Reports (Mar 2024)

Lesion-conditioning of synthetic MRI-derived subtraction-MIPs of the breast using a latent diffusion model

  • Lorenz A. Kapsner,
  • Lukas Folle,
  • Dominique Hadler,
  • Jessica Eberle,
  • Eva L. Balbach,
  • Andrzej Liebert,
  • Thomas Ganslandt,
  • Evelyn Wenkel,
  • Sabine Ohlmeyer,
  • Michael Uder,
  • Sebastian Bickelhaupt

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-56853-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract The purpose of this feasibility study is to investigate if latent diffusion models (LDMs) are capable to generate contrast enhanced (CE) MRI-derived subtraction maximum intensity projections (MIPs) of the breast, which are conditioned by lesions. We trained an LDM with n = 2832 CE-MIPs of breast MRI examinations of n = 1966 patients (median age: 50 years) acquired between the years 2015 and 2020. The LDM was subsequently conditioned with n = 756 segmented lesions from n = 407 examinations, indicating their location and BI-RADS scores. By applying the LDM, synthetic images were generated from the segmentations of an independent validation dataset. Lesions, anatomical correctness, and realistic impression of synthetic and real MIP images were further assessed in a multi-rater study with five independent raters, each evaluating n = 204 MIPs (50% real/50% synthetic images). The detection of synthetic MIPs by the raters was akin to random guessing with an AUC of 0.58. Interrater reliability of the lesion assessment was high both for real (Kendall’s W = 0.77) and synthetic images (W = 0.85). A higher AUC was observed for the detection of suspicious lesions (BI-RADS $$\ge $$ ≥ 4) in synthetic MIPs (0.88 vs. 0.77; p = 0.051). Our results show that LDMs can generate lesion-conditioned MRI-derived CE subtraction MIPs of the breast, however, they also indicate that the LDM tended to generate rather typical or ‘textbook representations’ of lesions.