Scientific Reports (Sep 2022)

Deep learning multi-organ segmentation for whole mouse cryo-images including a comparison of 2D and 3D deep networks

  • Yiqiao Liu,
  • Madhusudhana Gargesha,
  • Bryan Scott,
  • Arthure Olivia Tchilibou Wane,
  • David L. Wilson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-19037-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

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Abstract Cryo-imaging provided 3D whole-mouse microscopic color anatomy and fluorescence images that enables biotechnology applications (e.g., stem cells and metastatic cancer). In this report, we compared three methods of organ segmentation: 2D U-Net with 2D-slices and 3D U-Net with either 3D-whole-mouse or 3D-patches. We evaluated the brain, thymus, lung, heart, liver, stomach, spleen, left and right kidney, and bladder. Training with 63 mice, 2D-slices had the best performance, with median Dice scores of > 0.9 and median Hausdorff distances of < 1.2 mm in eightfold cross validation for all organs, except bladder, which is a problem organ due to variable filling and poor contrast. Results were comparable to those for a second analyst on the same data. Regression analyses were performed to fit learning curves, which showed that 2D-slices can succeed with fewer samples. Review and editing of 2D-slices segmentation results reduced human operator time from ~ 2-h to ~ 25-min, with reduced inter-observer variability. As demonstrations, we used organ segmentation to evaluate size changes in liver disease and to quantify the distribution of therapeutic mesenchymal stem cells in organs. With a 48-GB GPU, we determined that extra GPU RAM improved the performance of 3D deep learning because we could train at a higher resolution.