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Abstract #1206

Efficient Analysis of Myocardial Perfusion MRI with Human-in-the-loop Dynamic Quality Control: Initial Results Using the SCMR Registry

Dilek M. Yalcinkaya1,2, Zhuoan Li1,3, Khalid Youssef4, Bobak Heydari5, Rohan Dharmakumar3,4, Robert Judd6, Orlando Simonetti7, Subha Raman4, and Behzad Sharif1,3,4
1Laboratory for Translational Imaging of Microcirculation, Indiana University School of Medicine (IUSM), Indianapolis, IN, United States, 2Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States, 3Biomedical Engineering, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States, 4Krannert Cardiovascular Research Center, IUSM, Indianapolis, IN, United States, 5Stephenson Cardiac Imaging Centre, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB, Canada, 6Intelerad, Raleigh, NC, United States, 7Davis Heart and Lung Research Institute, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States

Synopsis

Keywords: Analysis/Processing, Segmentation

Motivation: Accurate segmentation of free-breathing (FB) myocardial perfusion (MP) MRI is a labor-intensive yet necessary preprocessing step. A quality control (QC) tool for deep learning (DL)-based segmentation of FB MP MRI is lacking.

Goal(s): Developing a DL-based dynamic QC (dQC) tool for automatic analysis of MP MRI.

Approach: Using the discrepancy between patch-based segmentations, a dQC map is derived and quantified into a dQC metric. The utility of this metric in detecting erroneous segmentations is demonstrated by considering a human-in-the-loop (HiTL) framework.

Results: Referral of the dQC-detected timeframes to a HiTL has markedly improved the segmentation results when compared to a random referral approach.

Impact: We proposed a dynamic quality control tool for automatic segmentation and analysis of free-breathing myocardial perfusion MRI datasets. Our results show that the proposed approach has markedly improved segmentation accuracy when used within a practical and efficient clinician-in-the-loop setting.

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Keywords