Deep Learning Automated Segmentation for Muscle and Adipose Tissue from Abdominal Computed Tomography in Polytrauma Patients.
Leanne L G C AckermansLeroy VolmerLeonard WeeRalph BrecheisenPatricia Sánchez-GonzálezAlexander P SeiffertEnrique J GómezAndre DekkerJan A Ten BoschSteven W M Olde DaminkTaco J BlokhuisPublished in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Manual segmentation of muscle and adipose compartments from computed tomography (CT) axial images is a potential bottleneck in early rapid detection and quantification of sarcopenia. A prototype deep learning neural network was trained on a multi-center collection of 3413 abdominal cancer surgery subjects to automatically segment truncal muscle, subcutaneous adipose tissue and visceral adipose tissue at the L3 lumbar vertebral level. Segmentations were externally tested on 233 polytrauma subjects. Although after severe trauma abdominal CT scans are quickly and robustly delivered, with often motion or scatter artefacts, incomplete vertebral bodies or arms that influence image quality, the concordance was generally very good for the body composition indices of Skeletal Muscle Radiation Attenuation (SMRA) (Concordance Correlation Coefficient (CCC) = 0.92), Visceral Adipose Tissue index (VATI) (CCC = 0.99) and Subcutaneous Adipose Tissue Index (SATI) (CCC = 0.99). In conclusion, this article showed an automated and accurate segmentation system to segment the cross-sectional muscle and adipose area L3 lumbar spine level on abdominal CT. Future perspectives will include fine-tuning the algorithm and minimizing the outliers.
Keyphrases
- deep learning
- adipose tissue
- image quality
- computed tomography
- skeletal muscle
- insulin resistance
- dual energy
- convolutional neural network
- body composition
- high fat diet
- positron emission tomography
- artificial intelligence
- contrast enhanced
- bone mineral density
- minimally invasive
- neural network
- machine learning
- cross sectional
- resistance training
- magnetic resonance imaging
- end stage renal disease
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- chronic kidney disease
- metabolic syndrome
- papillary thyroid
- squamous cell carcinoma
- air pollution
- diffusion weighted imaging
- coronary artery bypass
- high resolution
- postmenopausal women
- coronary artery disease
- radiation therapy
- climate change
- trauma patients
- squamous cell
- magnetic resonance