Publication date: Available online 28 March 2018
Source:Medical Image Analysis
Author(s): Ziyue Xu, Mingchen Gao, Georgios Z. Papadakis, Brian Luna, Sanjay Jain, Daniel J. Mollura, Ulas Bagci
Segmentation, denoising, and partial volume correction (PVC) are three major processes in the quantification of uptake regions in post-reconstruction PET images. These problems are conventionally addressed by independent steps. In this study, we hypothesize that these three processes are dependent; therefore, jointly solving them can provide optimal support for quantification of the PET images. To achieve this, we utilize interactions among these processes when designing solutions for each challenge. We also demonstrate that segmentation can help in denoising and PVC by locally constraining the smoothness and correction criteria. For denoising, we adapt generalized Anscombe transformation to Gaussianize the multiplicative noise followed by a new adaptive smoothing algorithm called regional mean denoising. For PVC, we propose a volume consistency-based iterative voxel-based correction algorithm in which denoised and delineated PET images guide the correction process during each iteration precisely. For PET image segmentation, we use affinity propagation (AP)-based iterative clustering method that helps the integration of PVC and denoising algorithms into the delineation process. Qualitative and quantitative results, obtained from phantoms, clinical, and pre-clinical data, show that the proposed framework provides an improved and joint solution for segmentation, denoising, and partial volume correction.
Graphical abstract
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