Evaluation of a deep learning approach for the detection of meniscal tears and their characterization (presence/absence of migrated meniscal fragment). Methods: A large annotated adult knee MRI database was built combining medical expertise of radiologists and data scientists' tools. Coronal and sagittal proton density fat suppressed-weighted images of 11,353 knee MRI examinations (10,401 individual patients) paired with their standardized structured reports were retrospectively collected. After database curation, deep learning models were trained and validated on a subset of 8058 examinations. Algorithm performance was evaluated on a test set of 299 examinations reviewed by 5 musculoskeletal specialists and compared to general radiologists' reports. External validation was performed using the publicly available MRNet database. Receiver Operating Characteristic (ROC) curves results and Area Under the Curve (AUC) values were obtained on internal and external databases. Results: A combined architecture of meniscal localization and lesion classification 3D convolutional neural networks reached AUC values of 0.93 (95% CI 0.82, 0.95) for medial and 0.84 (95% CI 0.78, 0.89) for lateral meniscal tear detection, and 0.91 (95% CI 0.87, 0.94) for medial and 0.95 (95% CI 0.92, 0.97) for lateral meniscal tear migration detection. External validation of the combined medial and lateral meniscal tear detection models resulted in an AUC of 0.83 (95% CI 0.75, 0.90) without further training and 0.89 (95% CI 0.82, 0.95) with fine tuning.
Conclusion:Our deep learning algorithm demonstrated high performance in knee menisci lesion detection and characterization, validated on an external database.
To compare deep learning (True Fidelity, TF) and partial model based Iterative Reconstruction (ASiR-V) algorithm for image texture, low contrast lesion detectability and potential dose reduction. Methods: Anthropomorphic phantoms (mimicking non-overweight and overweight patient), containing lesions of 6 mm in diameter with 20HU contrast, were scanned at five different dose levels (2,6,10,15,20 mGy) on a CT system, using clinical routine protocols for liver lesion detection. Images were reconstructed using ASiR-V 0% (surrogate for FBP), 60 % and TF at low, medium and high strength. Noise texture was characterized by computing a normalized Noise Power Spectrum filtered by an eye filter. The similarity against FBP texture was evaluated using peak frequency difference (PFD) and root mean square deviation (RMSD). Low contrast detectability was assessed using a channelized Hotelling observer and the area under the ROC curve (AUC) was used as figure of merit. Potential dose reduction was calculated to obtain the same AUC for TF and ASiR-V. Results: FBP-like noise texture was more preserved with TF (PFD from -0.043mm-1 to -0.09mm-1, RMSD from 0.12mm-1 to 0.21mm-1) than with ASiR-V (PFD equal to 0.12 mm-1, RMSD equal to 0.53mm-1), resulting in a sharper image. AUC was always higher with TF than ASIR-V. In average, TF compared to ASiR-V, enabled a radiation dose reduction potential of 7%, 25 % and 33 % for low, medium and high strength respectively. Conclusion: Compared to ASIR-V, TF at high strength does not impact noise texture and maintains low contrast liver lesions detectability at significant lower dose.
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