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An artificial intelligence framework for universal landmark matching and morphometry in musculoskeletal radiography.

April 22, 2026pubmed logopapers

Authors

Eschweiler D,Cornejo Merodio E,Barajas Ordonez F,Lichev A,Ignatova N,von der Stück MS,Kuhl CK,Truhn D,Nebelung S

Affiliations (4)

  • Lab for Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany. [email protected].
  • Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany. [email protected].
  • Lab for Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
  • Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany.

Abstract

Accurate morphometric measurements are crucial for musculoskeletal radiography, but they remain labor-intensive and prone to inter-reader variability. Current artificial intelligence-based solutions often require large annotated training datasets and narrow applications. We present and validate a training-free artificial intelligence framework that automatically derives morphometric measurements across multiple anatomies and radiographic views using universal landmark matching. In this retrospective study, 600 standard radiographs of the foot, knee, and shoulder are analyzed. Additionally, a cohort of 240 challenging radiographs containing orthopedic implants was constructed to stress-test the approach. Landmarks from reference radiographs are transferred to unseen radiographs using a pre-trained generalist dense-matching method, and are then used to derive measurements in a post-processing step. The resulting measurements were compared with manual annotations and measurements by two radiologists. Mean landmark matching error is 2.68 ± 2.70 mm using a single reference radiograph and improves to 2.15 ± 2.38 mm with 40 reference radiographs. Measurement accuracy ranges from 1.81° (I-II metatarsal angle) to 8.65° (congruence angle). Increasing the number of reference images improved measurement accuracy, and mostly approached inter-reader agreement. Performance is mixed on the challenging cohort, demonstrating the limitations and strengths of the approach. This anatomy-agnostic framework enables training-free morphometry across multiple regions, with measurement-dependent performance often comparable to inter-reader agreement. Challenging cases highlight specific limitations, motivating the use of quality control and reference-set tuning for deployment. Its minimal setup enables rapid adaptation to new anatomies and measurements, and clinically practical runtimes require GPU inference. Question Can a generalist artificial intelligence framework be used to accurately and automatically perform morphometric measurements across different musculoskeletal radiographs without anatomy-specific training? Findings The training-free approach achieved performance that approaches expert-level agreement for most measurements, while highlighting measurement-specific limitations in challenging cases. Multiple reference radiographs improved results. Clinical relevance This approach automates repetitive morphometric measurements that are prone to inter-reader variability, reducing manual workload while providing reproducible results that can approach expert radiologist performance. Its adaptability and minimal setup enable integration into routine workflows.

Topics

Journal Article

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