Frontiers in Oncology (Nov 2022)

Automatic segmentation of nasopharyngeal carcinoma on CT images using efficient UNet‐2.5D ensemble with semi‐supervised pretext task pretraining

  • Jansen Keith L. Domoguen,
  • Jen-Jen A. Manuel,
  • Johanna Patricia A. Cañal,
  • Prospero C. Naval

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.980312
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is primarily treated with radiation therapy. Accurate delineation of target volumes and organs at risk is important. However, manual delineation is time-consuming, variable, and subjective depending on the experience of the radiation oncologist. This work explores the use of deep learning methods to automate the segmentation of NPC primary gross tumor volume (GTVp) in planning computer tomography (CT) images. A total of sixty-three (63) patients diagnosed with NPC were included in this study. Although a number of studies applied have shown the effectiveness of deep learning methods in medical imaging, their high performance has mainly been due to the wide availability of data. In contrast, the data for NPC is scarce and inaccessible. To tackle this problem, we propose two sequential approaches. First we propose a much simpler architecture which follows the UNet design but using 2D convolutional network for 3D segmentation. We find that this specific architecture is much more effective in the segmentation of GTV in NPC. We highlight its efficacy over other more popular and modern architecture by achieving significantly higher performance. Moreover to further improve performance, we trained the model using multi-scale dataset to create an ensemble of models. However, the performance of the model is ultimately dependent on the availability of labelled data. Hence building on top of this proposed architecture, we employ the use of semi-supervised learning by proposing the use of a combined pre-text tasks. Specifically we use the combination of 3D rotation and 3D relative-patch location pre-texts tasks to pretrain the feature extractor. We use an additional 50 CT images of healthy patients which have no annotation or labels. By semi-supervised pretraining the feature extractor can be frozen after pretraining which essentially makes it much more efficient in terms of the number of parameters since only the decoder is trained. Finally it is not only efficient in terms of parameters but also data, which is shown when the pretrained model with only portion of the labelled training data was able to achieve very close performance to the model trained with the full labelled data.

Keywords