A fully automatic radiomics pipeline for postoperative facial nerve function prediction of vestibular schwannoma.

May 14, 2025pubmed logopapers

Authors

Song G,Li K,Wang Z,Liu W,Xue Q,Liang J,Zhou Y,Geng H,Liu D

Affiliations (3)

  • Department of Neurosurgery, Xuanwu Hospital, Capital Medical University, Beijing, China.
  • School of Information Science and Technology, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing, China.
  • School of Information Science and Technology, Beijing University of Technology, Beijing, China. Electronic address: [email protected].

Abstract

Vestibular schwannoma (VS) is the most prevalent intracranial schwannoma. Surgery is one of the options for the treatment of VS, with the preservation of facial nerve (FN) function being the primary objective. Therefore, postoperative FN function prediction is essential. However, achieving automation for such a method remains a challenge. In this study, we proposed a fully automatic deep learning approach based on multi-sequence magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to predict FN function after surgery in VS patients. We first developed a segmentation network 2.5D Trans-UNet, which combined Transformer and U-Net to optimize contour segmentation for radiomic feature extraction. Next, we built a deep learning network based on the integration of 1DConvolutional Neural Network (1DCNN) and Gated Recurrent Unit (GRU) to predict postoperative FN function using the extracted features. We trained and tested the 2.5D Trans-UNet segmentation network on public and private datasets, achieving accuracies of 89.51% and 90.66%, respectively, confirming the model's strong performance. Then Feature extraction and selection were performed on the private dataset's segmentation results using 2.5D Trans-UNet. The selected features were used to train the 1DCNN-GRU network for classification. The results showed that our proposed fully automatic radiomics pipeline outperformed the traditional radiomics pipeline on the test set, achieving an accuracy of 88.64%, demonstrating its effectiveness in predicting the postoperative FN function in VS patients. Our proposed automatic method has the potential to become a valuable decision-making tool in neurosurgery, assisting neurosurgeons in making more informed decisions regarding surgical interventions and improving the treatment of VS patients.

Topics

Neuroma, AcousticFacial NerveMagnetic Resonance ImagingDeep LearningJournal Article
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