Intraoperative Organ Motion Models with an Ensemble of Conditional Generative Adversarial Networks
September 05, 2017 Β· Declared Dead Β· π International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention
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Authors
Yipeng Hu, Eli Gibson, Tom Vercauteren, Hashim U. Ahmed, Mark Emberton, Caroline M. Moore, J. Alison Noble, Dean C. Barratt
arXiv ID
1709.02255
Category
cs.CV: Computer Vision
Cross-listed
cs.LG
Citations
16
Venue
International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention
Last Checked
4 months ago
Abstract
In this paper, we describe how a patient-specific, ultrasound-probe-induced prostate motion model can be directly generated from a single preoperative MR image. Our motion model allows for sampling from the conditional distribution of dense displacement fields, is encoded by a generative neural network conditioned on a medical image, and accepts random noise as additional input. The generative network is trained by a minimax optimisation with a second discriminative neural network, tasked to distinguish generated samples from training motion data. In this work, we propose that 1) jointly optimising a third conditioning neural network that pre-processes the input image, can effectively extract patient-specific features for conditioning; and 2) combining multiple generative models trained separately with heuristically pre-disjointed training data sets can adequately mitigate the problem of mode collapse. Trained with diagnostic T2-weighted MR images from 143 real patients and 73,216 3D dense displacement fields from finite element simulations of intraoperative prostate motion due to transrectal ultrasound probe pressure, the proposed models produced physically-plausible patient-specific motion of prostate glands. The ability to capture biomechanically simulated motion was evaluated using two errors representing generalisability and specificity of the model. The median values, calculated from a 10-fold cross-validation, were 2.8+/-0.3 mm and 1.7+/-0.1 mm, respectively. We conclude that the introduced approach demonstrates the feasibility of applying state-of-the-art machine learning algorithms to generate organ motion models from patient images, and shows significant promise for future research.
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