Published June 4, 2024 | Version v1
Publication Open

Patient-specific placental vessel segmentation with limited data

  • 1. Computer Vision Lab, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
  • 2. Multi-Scale Robotics Lab, ETH Zurich, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland
  • 3. Department of Pediatric Surgery, University Children's Hospital Zurich, 8032 Zurich, Switzerland
  • 4. Department of Obstetrics, University Hospital of Zurich, 8091 Zurich, Switzerland

Description

A major obstacle in applying machine learning for medical fields is the disparity between the data distribution of the training images and the data encountered in clinics. This phenomenon can be explained by inconsistent acquisition techniques and large variations across the patient spectrum. The result is poor translation of the trained models to the clinic, which limits their implementation in medical practice. Patient-specific trained networks could provide a potential solution. Although patient-specific approaches are usually infeasible because of the expenses associated with on-the-fly labeling, the use of generative adversarial networks enables this approach. This study proposes a patient-specific approach based on generative adversarial networks. In the presented training pipeline, the user trains a patient-specific segmentation network with extremely limited data which is supplemented with artificial samples generated by generative adversarial models. This approach is demonstrated in endoscopic video data captured during fetoscopic laser coagulation, a procedure used for treating twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome by ablating the placental blood vessels. Compared to a standard deep learning segmentation approach, the pipeline was able to achieve an intersection over union score of 0.60 using only 20 annotated images compared to 100 images using a standard approach. Furthermore, training with 20 annotated images without the use of the pipeline achieves an intersection over union score of 0.30, which, therefore, corresponds to a 100% increase in performance when incorporating the pipeline. A pipeline using GANs was used to generate artificial data which supplements the real data, this allows patient-specific training of a segmentation network. We show that artificial images generated using GANs significantly improve performance in vessel segmentation and that training patient-specific models can be a viable solution to bring automated vessel segmentation to the clinic.

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
ANGIE – MAgnetically steerable wireless Nanodevices for the tarGeted delivery of therapeutIc agents in any vascular rEgion of the body 952152
European Commission
SOMBOT – Soft Micro Robotics 743217
Swiss National Science Foundation
A Submillimeter Minimally Invasive System for Cardiac Arrhythmia Ablations 180861
Swiss National Science Foundation
Arbeitstitel 'Soft Magnetic Robots: Modeling, Design and Control of Magnetically Guided Continuum Manipulators' 185039

Dates

Other
2024-06-04