Accurate pancreas segmentation using multi-level pyramidal pooling residual U-Net with adversarial mechanism

Abstract Background A novel multi-level pyramidal pooling residual U-Net with adversarial mechanism was proposed for organ segmentation from medical imaging, and was conducted on the challenging NIH Pancreas-CT dataset. Methods The 82 pancreatic contrast-enhanced abdominal CT volumes were split via...

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Autores principales: Meiyu Li, Fenghui Lian, Chunyu Wang, Shuxu Guo
Formato: article
Lenguaje:EN
Publicado: BMC 2021
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Acceso en línea:https://doaj.org/article/6172d803667641d1ac167f3267bc6747
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Sumario:Abstract Background A novel multi-level pyramidal pooling residual U-Net with adversarial mechanism was proposed for organ segmentation from medical imaging, and was conducted on the challenging NIH Pancreas-CT dataset. Methods The 82 pancreatic contrast-enhanced abdominal CT volumes were split via four-fold cross validation to test the model performance. In order to achieve accurate segmentation, we firstly involved residual learning into an adversarial U-Net to achieve a better gradient information flow for improving segmentation performance. Then, we introduced a multi-level pyramidal pooling module (MLPP), where a novel pyramidal pooling was involved to gather contextual information for segmentation, then four groups of structures consisted of a different number of pyramidal pooling blocks were proposed to search for the structure with the optimal performance, and two types of pooling blocks were applied in the experimental section to further assess the robustness of MLPP for pancreas segmentation. For evaluation, Dice similarity coefficient (DSC) and recall were used as the metrics in this work. Results The proposed method preceded the baseline network 5.30% and 6.16% on metrics DSC and recall, and achieved competitive results compared with the-state-of-art methods. Conclusions Our algorithm showed great segmentation performance even on the particularly challenging pancreas dataset, this indicates that the proposed model is a satisfactory and promising segmentor.