Paper 13407-41
Benchmarking multiorgan segmentation tools for multiparametric T1-weighted abdominal MRI
19 February 2025 • 5:10 PM - 5:30 PM PST | Town & Country C
Abstract
The segmentation of multiple organs in multi-parametric MRI studies is critical for many applications in radiology, such as correlating imaging biomarkers with disease status (e.g., cirrhosis, diabetes). Recently, three publicly available tools, such as MRSegmentator (MRSeg), TotalSegmentator MRI (TS), and TotalVibeSegmentator (VIBE), have been proposed for multi-organ segmentation in MRI. However, the performance of these tools on specific MRI sequence types has not yet been quantified. In this work, a subset of 40 volumes from the public Duke Liver Dataset was curated. The curated dataset contained 10 volumes each from the pre-contrast fat saturated T1, arterial T1w, venous T1w, and delayed T1w phases, respectively. Ten abdominal structures were manually annotated in these volumes. Next, the performance of the three public tools was benchmarked on this curated dataset. The results indicated that MRSeg obtained a Dice score of 80.7 ± 18.6 and Hausdorff Distance (HD) error of 8.9 ± 10.4 mm. It fared the best (p < .05) across the different sequence types in contrast to TS and VIBE.
Presenter
National Institutes of Health (United States)
Ronald M. Summers, M.D., Ph.D., is a tenured Senior Investigator and Staff Radiologist in the Radiology and Imaging Sciences Department at the NIH Clinical Center in Bethesda, MD. He leads the Imaging Biomarkers and Computer-aided Diagnosis Lab. He is a Fellow of the Society of Abdominal Radiologists, the American Institute for Medical and Biological Engineering and SPIE. His awards include the Presidential Early Career Award for Scientists and Engineers, the NIH Director’s Award, and the NIH Ruth L. Kirschstein Mentoring Award. He is a member of the editorial boards of Academic Radiology and the Journal of Medical Imaging and a past member of the editorial boards of Radiology and Radiology: Artificial Intelligence. He has co-authored 700 journal, review, book chapter and conference proceedings articles and is a co-inventor on 17 patents. His research interests include thoracic and abdominal imaging, large radiology image databases, and artificial intelligence.