NeuroImage: Clinical (Jan 2017)

Deep multi-scale location-aware 3D convolutional neural networks for automated detection of lacunes of presumed vascular origin

  • Mohsen Ghafoorian,
  • Nico Karssemeijer,
  • Tom Heskes,
  • Mayra Bergkamp,
  • Joost Wissink,
  • Jiri Obels,
  • Karlijn Keizer,
  • Frank-Erik de Leeuw,
  • Bram van Ginneken,
  • Elena Marchiori,
  • Bram Platel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2017.01.033
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. C
pp. 391 – 399

Abstract

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Lacunes of presumed vascular origin (lacunes) are associated with an increased risk of stroke, gait impairment, and dementia and are a primary imaging feature of the small vessel disease. Quantification of lacunes may be of great importance to elucidate the mechanisms behind neuro-degenerative disorders and is recommended as part of study standards for small vessel disease research. However, due to the different appearance of lacunes in various brain regions and the existence of other similar-looking structures, such as perivascular spaces, manual annotation is a difficult, elaborative and subjective task, which can potentially be greatly improved by reliable and consistent computer-aided detection (CAD) routines. In this paper, we propose an automated two-stage method using deep convolutional neural networks (CNN). We show that this method has good performance and can considerably benefit readers. We first use a fully convolutional neural network to detect initial candidates. In the second step, we employ a 3D CNN as a false positive reduction tool. As the location information is important to the analysis of candidate structures, we further equip the network with contextual information using multi-scale analysis and integration of explicit location features. We trained, validated and tested our networks on a large dataset of 1075 cases obtained from two different studies. Subsequently, we conducted an observer study with four trained observers and compared our method with them using a free-response operating characteristic analysis. Shown on a test set of 111 cases, the resulting CAD system exhibits performance similar to the trained human observers and achieves a sensitivity of 0.974 with 0.13 false positives per slice. A feasibility study also showed that a trained human observer would considerably benefit once aided by the CAD system.

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