DS3 -Net: Difficulty-Perceived Common-to-T1ce Semi-supervised Multimodal MRI Synthesis Network

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Abstract

Contrast-enhanced T1 (T1ce) is one of the most essential magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) modalities for diagnosing and analyzing brain tumors, especially gliomas. In clinical practice, common MRI modalities such as T1, T2, and fluid attenuation inversion recovery are relatively easy to access while T1ce is more challenging considering the additional cost and potential risk of allergies to the contrast agent. Therefore, it is of great clinical necessity to develop a method to synthesize T1ce from other common modalities. Current paired image translation methods typically have the issue of requiring a large amount of paired data and do not focus on specific regions of interest, e.g., the tumor region, in the synthesization process. To address these issues, we propose a Difficulty-perceived common-to-T1ce Semi-Supervised multimodal MRI Synthesis network (DS3 -Net), involving both paired and unpaired data together with dual-level knowledge distillation. DS3 -Net predicts a difficulty map to progressively promote the synthesis task. Specifically, a pixelwise constraint and a patchwise contrastive constraint are guided by the predicted difficulty map. Through extensive experiments on the publicly-available BraTS2020 dataset, DS3 -Net outperforms its supervised counterpart in each respect. Furthermore, with only 5% paired data, the proposed DS3 -Net achieves competitive performance with state-of-the-art image translation methods utilizing 100% paired data, delivering an average SSIM of 0.8947 and an average PSNR of 23.60. The source code is available at https://github.com/Huangziqi777/DS-3_Net.

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APA

Huang, Z., Lin, L., Cheng, P., Pan, K., & Tang, X. (2022). DS3 -Net: Difficulty-Perceived Common-to-T1ce Semi-supervised Multimodal MRI Synthesis Network. In Lecture Notes in Computer Science (including subseries Lecture Notes in Artificial Intelligence and Lecture Notes in Bioinformatics) (Vol. 13436 LNCS, pp. 571–581). Springer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-16446-0_54

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