论文标题
自动病变分析以提高效率在颅脑外伤预测中的效率
Automatic lesion analysis for increased efficiency in outcome prediction of traumatic brain injury
论文作者
论文摘要
对脑外伤(TBI)患者的准确预后很难为治疗,患者管理和长期护理提供信息至关重要。年龄,运动和学生反应性,缺氧和低血压以及计算机断层扫描(CT)的放射学发现等患者特征已被确定为TBI结果预测的重要变量。 CT是临床实践中首选的急性成像方式,因为其获取速度和广泛的可用性。但是,这种方式主要用于定性和半定量评估,例如马歇尔评分系统(Marshall评分系统),该系统容易受到主观性和人类错误。这项工作探讨了使用最先进的,深度学习的TBI病变细分方法从常规获得的医院入院CT扫描中提取的成像生物标志物的预测能力。我们使用病变体积和相应的病变统计作为扩展TBI结果预测模型的输入。我们将我们提出的功能的预测能力与马歇尔分数进行了比较,并与经典的TBI生物标志物配对时。我们发现,在预测不利的TBI结果时,自动提取的定量CT特征的性能与Marshall分数相似或更好。利用自动地图集对齐,我们还确定额叶外病变是不良预后的重要指标。我们的工作可能有助于更好地了解TBI,并提供有关如何使用自动化神经成像分析来改善TBI后预测的新见解。
The accurate prognosis for traumatic brain injury (TBI) patients is difficult yet essential to inform therapy, patient management, and long-term after-care. Patient characteristics such as age, motor and pupil responsiveness, hypoxia and hypotension, and radiological findings on computed tomography (CT), have been identified as important variables for TBI outcome prediction. CT is the acute imaging modality of choice in clinical practice because of its acquisition speed and widespread availability. However, this modality is mainly used for qualitative and semi-quantitative assessment, such as the Marshall scoring system, which is prone to subjectivity and human errors. This work explores the predictive power of imaging biomarkers extracted from routinely-acquired hospital admission CT scans using a state-of-the-art, deep learning TBI lesion segmentation method. We use lesion volumes and corresponding lesion statistics as inputs for an extended TBI outcome prediction model. We compare the predictive power of our proposed features to the Marshall score, independently and when paired with classic TBI biomarkers. We find that automatically extracted quantitative CT features perform similarly or better than the Marshall score in predicting unfavourable TBI outcomes. Leveraging automatic atlas alignment, we also identify frontal extra-axial lesions as important indicators of poor outcome. Our work may contribute to a better understanding of TBI, and provides new insights into how automated neuroimaging analysis can be used to improve prognostication after TBI.