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Computer-Aided Detection of Metastatic Brain Tumors Using Magnetic Resonance Black-Blood Imaging

Authors
Yang, SeungwookNam, YoonhoKim, Min-OhKim, Eung YeopPark, JaeseokKim, Dong-Hyun
Issue Date
Feb-2013
Publisher
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
Keywords
brain metastases; computer-aided detection; black-blood imaging; MP-RAGE; artificial neural network
Citation
INVESTIGATIVE RADIOLOGY, v.48, no.2, pp.113 - 119
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
INVESTIGATIVE RADIOLOGY
Volume
48
Number
2
Start Page
113
End Page
119
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/104140
DOI
10.1097/RLI.0b013e318277f078
ISSN
0020-9996
Abstract
Objectives: The objective of this study was to develop a computer-aided detection system for automated brain metastases detection using magnetic resonance black-blood imaging and compare its applicability with conventional magnetization-prepared rapid gradient echo (MP-RAGE) imaging. Materials and Methods: Twenty-six patients with brain metastases were imaged with a contrast-enhanced, 3-dimensional, whole-brain magnetic resonance black-blood pulse sequence. Approval from the institutional review board and informed consent from the patients were obtained. Preprocessing steps included B1 inhomogeneity correction and brain extraction. The computer-aided detection system used 3-dimensional template matching, which measured normalized cross-correlation coefficient to generate possible metastases candidates. An artificial neural network was used for classification after various volume features were extracted. The same detection procedure was tested with contrast-enhanced MP-RAGE, which was also acquired from the same patients. Results: The performance of the proposed detection method was measured by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC), sensitivity, and specificity values. In the black-blood case, detection process displayed an AUROC of 0.9355, a sensitivity value of 81.1%, and a specificity value of 98.2%. Magnetization-prepared rapid gradient echo data showed an AUROC of 0.6508, a sensitivity value of 30.2%, and a specificity value of 99.97%. Conclusions: The results demonstrate that accurate automated detection of metastatic brain tumors using contrast-enhanced black-blood imaging sequence is possible compared with using conventional contrast-enhanced MP-RAGE sequence.
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