Segmentation of stroke lesions using transformers‐augmented MRI analysis

Author:

Ahmed Ramsha1ORCID,Al Shehhi Aamna12,Werghi Naoufel3,Seghier Mohamed L.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biomedical Engineering and Biotechnology Khalifa University of Science and Technology Abu Dhabi UAE

2. Healthcare Engineering Innovation Center (HEIC) Khalifa University of Science and Technology Abu Dhabi UAE

3. Department of Computer Science Khalifa University of Science and Technology Abu Dhabi UAE

Abstract

AbstractAccurate segmentation of chronic stroke lesions from mono‐spectral magnetic resonance imaging scans (e.g., T1‐weighted images) is a difficult task due to the arbitrary shape, complex texture, variable size and intensities, and varied locations of the lesions. Due to this inherent spatial heterogeneity, existing machine learning methods have shown moderate performance for chronic lesion delineation. In this study, we introduced: (1) a method that integrates transformers' deformable feature attention mechanism with convolutional deep learning architecture to improve the accuracy and generalizability of stroke lesion segmentation, and (2) an ecological data augmentation technique based on inserting real lesions into intact brain regions. Our combination of these two approaches resulted in a significant increase in segmentation performance, with a Dice index of 0.82 (±0.39), outperforming the existing methods trained and tested on the same Anatomical Tracings of Lesions After Stroke (ATLAS) 2022 dataset. Our method performed relatively well even for cases with small stroke lesions. We validated the robustness of our method through an ablation study and by testing it on new unseen brain scans from the Ischemic Stroke Lesion Segmentation (ISLES) 2015 dataset. Overall, our proposed approach of transformers with ecological data augmentation offers a robust way to delineate chronic stroke lesions with clinically relevant accuracy. Our method can be extended to other challenging tasks that require automated detection and segmentation of diverse brain abnormalities from clinical scans.

Funder

Khalifa University of Science, Technology and Research

Publisher

Wiley

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