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Bi-directional Synthesis of Pre- and Post-contrast MRI via Guided Feature Disentanglement.

Yuan XueBlake E DeweyLianrui ZuoShuo HanAaron CarassPeiyu DuanSamuel W RemediosDzung L PhamShiv SaidhaPeter A CalabresiJerry L Prince
Published in: Simulation and synthesis in medical imaging : ... International Workshop, SASHIMI ..., held in conjunction with MICCAI ..., proceedings. SASHIMI (Workshop) (2022)
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) with gadolinium contrast is widely used for tissue enhancement and better identification of active lesions and tumors. Recent studies have shown that gadolinium deposition can accumulate in tissues including the brain, which raises safety concerns. Prior works have tried to synthesize post-contrast T1-weighted MRIs from pre-contrast MRIs to avoid the use of gadolinium. However, contrast and image representations are often entangled during the synthesis process, resulting in synthetic post-contrast MRIs with undesirable contrast enhancements. Moreover, the synthesis of pre-contrast MRIs from post-contrast MRIs which can be useful for volumetric analysis is rarely investigated in the literature. To tackle pre- and post- contrast MRI synthesis, we propose a BI-directional Contrast Enhancement Prediction and Synthesis (BICEPS) network that enables disentanglement of contrast and image representations via a bi-directional image-to-image translation(I2I)model. Our proposed model can perform both pre-to-post and post-to-pre contrast synthesis, and provides an interpretable synthesis process by predicting contrast enhancement maps from the learned contrast embedding. Extensive experiments on a multiple sclerosis dataset demonstrate the feasibility of applying our bidirectional synthesis and show that BICEPS outperforms current methods.
Keyphrases
  • contrast enhanced
  • magnetic resonance
  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • multiple sclerosis
  • computed tomography
  • deep learning
  • working memory
  • white matter
  • functional connectivity
  • resting state
  • brain injury