Abstract:Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a chronic progressive neurological disease characterized by the development of lesions in the white matter of the brain. T2-fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides superior visualization and characterization of MS lesions, relative to other MRI modalities. Longitudinal brain FLAIR MRI in MS, involving repetitively imaging a patient over time, provides helpful information for clinicians towards monitoring disease progression. Predicting future whole brain MRI examinations with variable time lag has only been attempted in limited applications, such as healthy aging and structural degeneration in Alzheimer's Disease. In this article, we present novel modifications to deep learning architectures for MS FLAIR image synthesis, in order to support prediction of longitudinal images in a flexible continuous way. This is achieved with learned transposed convolutions, which support modelling time as a spatially distributed array with variable temporal properties at different spatial locations. Thus, this approach can theoretically model spatially-specific time-dependent brain development, supporting the modelling of more rapid growth at appropriate physical locations, such as the site of an MS brain lesion. This approach also supports the clinician user to define how far into the future a predicted examination should target. Accurate prediction of future rounds of imaging can inform clinicians of potentially poor patient outcomes, which may be able to contribute to earlier treatment and better prognoses. Four distinct deep learning architectures have been developed. The ISBI2015 longitudinal MS dataset was used to validate and compare our proposed approaches. Results demonstrate that a modified ACGAN achieves the best performance and reduces variability in model accuracy.
Abstract:Multiple Sclerosis (MS) is a chronic neurological condition characterized by the development of lesions in the white matter of the brain. T2-fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) provides superior visualization and characterization of MS lesions, relative to other MRI modalities. Follow-up brain FLAIR MRI in MS provides helpful information for clinicians towards monitoring disease progression. In this study, we propose a novel modification to generative adversarial networks (GANs) to predict future lesion-specific FLAIR MRI for MS at fixed time intervals. We use supervised guided attention and dilated convolutions in the discriminator, which supports making an informed prediction of whether the generated images are real or not based on attention to the lesion area, which in turn has potential to help improve the generator to predict the lesion area of future examinations more accurately. We compared our method to several baselines and one state-of-art CF-SAGAN model [1]. In conclusion, our results indicate that the proposed method achieves higher accuracy and reduces the standard deviation of the prediction errors in the lesion area compared with other models with similar overall performance.