A fully automated pipeline for the extraction of pectoralis muscle area from chest computed tomography scans

Author:

Genkin DanielORCID,Jenkins Alex R.,van Noord Nikki,Makimoto KalystaORCID,Collins Sophie,Stickland Michael K.,Tan Wan C.,Bourbeau JeanORCID,Jensen Dennis,Kirby MirandaORCID

Abstract

BackgroundComputed tomography (CT)-derived pectoralis muscle area (PMA) measurements are prognostic in people with or at-risk of COPD, but fully automated PMA extraction has yet to be developed. Our objective was to develop and validate a PMA extraction pipeline that can automatically: 1) identify the aortic arch slice; and 2) perform pectoralis segmentation at that slice.MethodsCT images from the Canadian Cohort of Obstructive Lung Disease (CanCOLD) study were used for pipeline development. Aorta atlases were used to automatically identify the slice containing the aortic arch by group-based registration. A deep learning model was trained to segment the PMA. The pipeline was evaluated in comparison to manual segmentation. An external dataset was used to evaluate generalisability. Model performance was assessed using the Dice–Sorensen coefficient (DSC) and PMA error.ResultsIn total 90 participants were used for training (age 67.0±9.9 years; forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV1) 93±21% predicted; FEV1/forced vital capacity (FVC) 0.69±0.10; 47 men), and 32 for external testing (age 68.6±7.4 years; FEV165±17% predicted; FEV1/FVC 0.50±0.09; 16 men). Compared with manual segmentation, the deep learning model achieved a DSC of 0.94±0.02, 0.94±0.01 and 0.90±0.04 on the true aortic arch slice in the train, validation and external test sets, respectively. Automated aortic arch slice detection obtained distance errors of 1.2±1.3 mm and 1.6±1.5 mm on the train and test data, respectively. Fully automated PMA measurements were not different from manual segmentation (p>0.05). PMA measurements were different between people with and without COPD (p=0.01) and correlated with FEV1% predicted (p<0.05).ConclusionA fully automated CT PMA extraction pipeline was developed and validated for use in research and clinical practice.

Funder

Canada Research Chairs

Fonds de Recherche du Québec - Santé

Government of Ontario

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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