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Application of Artificial Intelligence to Deliver Healthcare From the Eye.

Weinreb RN, Lee AY, Baxter SL, Lee RWJ, Leng T, McConnell MV, El-Nimri NW, Rhew DC

pubmed logopapersMay 8 2025
Oculomics is the science of analyzing ocular data to identify, diagnose, and manage systemic disease. This article focuses on prescreening, its use with retinal images analyzed by artificial intelligence (AI), to identify ocular or systemic disease or potential disease in asymptomatic individuals. The implementation of prescreening in a coordinated care system, defined as Healthcare From the Eye prescreening, has the potential to improve access, affordability, equity, quality, and safety of health care on a global level. Stakeholders include physicians, payers, policymakers, regulators and representatives from industry, government, and data privacy sectors. The combination of AI analysis of ocular data with automated technologies that capture images during routine eye examinations enables prescreening of large populations for chronic disease. Retinal images can be acquired during either a routine eye examination or in settings outside of eye care with readily accessible, safe, quick, and noninvasive retinal imaging devices. The outcome of such an examination can then be digitally communicated across relevant stakeholders in a coordinated fashion to direct a patient to screening and monitoring services. Such an approach offers the opportunity to transform health care delivery and improve early disease detection, improve access to care, enhance equity especially in rural and underserved communities, and reduce costs. With effective implementation and collaboration among key stakeholders, this approach has the potential to contribute to an equitable and effective health care system.

MRI-based machine learning reveals proteasome subunit PSMB8-mediated malignant glioma phenotypes through activating TGFBR1/2-SMAD2/3 axis.

Pei D, Ma Z, Qiu Y, Wang M, Wang Z, Liu X, Zhang L, Zhang Z, Li R, Yan D

pubmed logopapersMay 8 2025
Gliomas are the most prevalent and aggressive neoplasms of the central nervous system, representing a major challenge for effective treatment and patient prognosis. This study identifies the proteasome subunit beta type-8 (PSMB8/LMP7) as a promising prognostic biomarker for glioma. Using a multiparametric radiomic model derived from preoperative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), we accurately predicted PSMB8 expression levels. Notably, radiomic prediction of poor prognosis was highly consistent with elevated PSMB8 expression. Our findings demonstrate that PSMB8 depletion not only suppressed glioma cell proliferation and migration but also induced apoptosis via activation of the transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) signaling pathway. This was supported by downregulation of key receptors (TGFBR1 and TGFBR2). Furthermore, interference with PSMB8 expression impaired phosphorylation and nuclear translocation of SMAD2/3, critical mediators of TGF-β signaling. Consequently, these molecular alterations resulted in reduced tumor progression and enhanced sensitivity to temozolomide (TMZ), a standard chemotherapeutic agent. Overall, our findings highlight PSMB8's pivotal role in glioma pathophysiology and its potential as a prognostic marker. This study also demonstrates the clinical utility of MRI radiomics for preoperative risk stratification and pre-diagnosis. Targeted inhibition of PSMB8 may represent a therapeutic strategy to overcome TMZ resistance and improve glioma patient outcomes.

Are Diffusion Models Effective Good Feature Extractors for MRI Discriminative Tasks?

Li B, Sun Z, Li C, Kamagata K, Andica C, Uchida W, Takabayashi K, Guo S, Zou R, Aoki S, Tanaka T, Zhao Q

pubmed logopapersMay 8 2025
Diffusion models (DMs) excel in pixel-level and spatial tasks and are proven feature extractors for 2D image discriminative tasks when pretrained. However, their capabilities in 3D MRI discriminative tasks remain largely untapped. This study seeks to assess the effectiveness of DMs in this underexplored area. We use 59830 T1-weighted MR images (T1WIs) from the extensive, yet unlabeled, UK Biobank dataset. Additionally, we apply 369 T1WIs from the BraTS2020 dataset specifically for brain tumor classification, and 421 T1WIs from the ADNI1 dataset for the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease. Firstly, a high-performing denoising diffusion probabilistic model (DDPM) with a U-Net backbone is pretrained on the UK Biobank, then fine-tuned on the BraTS2020 and ADNI1 datasets. Afterward, we assess its feature representation capabilities for discriminative tasks using linear probes. Finally, we accordingly introduce a novel fusion module, named CATS, that enhances the U-Net representations, thereby improving performance on discriminative tasks. Our DDPM produces synthetic images of high quality that match the distribution of the raw datasets. Subsequent analysis reveals that DDPM features extracted from middle blocks and smaller timesteps are of high quality. Leveraging these features, the CATS module, with just 1.7M additional parameters, achieved average classification scores of 0.7704 and 0.9217 on the BraTS2020 and ADNI1 datasets, demonstrating competitive performance with that of the representations extracted from the transferred DDPM model, as well as the 33.23M parameters ResNet18 trained from scratch. We have found that pretraining a DM on a large-scale dataset and then fine-tuning it on limited data from discriminative datasets is a viable approach for MRI data. With these well-performing DMs, we show that they excel not just in generation tasks but also as feature extractors when combined with our proposed CATS module.

Deep learning approach based on a patch residual for pediatric supracondylar subtle fracture detection.

Ye Q, Wang Z, Lou Y, Yang Y, Hou J, Liu Z, Liu W, Li J

pubmed logopapersMay 8 2025
Supracondylar humerus fractures in children are among the most common elbow fractures in pediatrics. However, their diagnosis can be particularly challenging due to the anatomical characteristics and imaging features of the pediatric skeleton. In recent years, convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have achieved notable success in medical image analysis, though their performance typically relies on large-scale, high-quality labeled datasets. Unfortunately, labeled samples for pediatric supracondylar fractures are scarce and difficult to obtain. To address this issue, this paper introduces a deep learning-based multi-scale patch residual network (MPR) for the automatic detection and localization of subtle pediatric supracondylar fractures. The MPR framework combines a CNN for automatic feature extraction with a multi-scale generative adversarial network to model skeletal integrity using healthy samples. By leveraging healthy images to learn the normal skeletal distribution, the approach reduces the dependency on labeled fracture data and effectively addresses the challenges posed by limited pediatric datasets. Datasets from two different hospitals were used, with data augmentation techniques applied during both training and validation. On an independent test set, the proposed model achieves an accuracy of 90.5%, with 89% sensitivity, 92% specificity, and an F1 score of 0.906-outperforming the diagnostic accuracy of emergency medicine physicians and approaching that of pediatric radiologists. Furthermore, the model demonstrates a fast inference speed of 1.1 s per sheet, underscoring its substantial potential for clinical application.

Improved Brain Tumor Detection in MRI: Fuzzy Sigmoid Convolution in Deep Learning

Muhammad Irfan, Anum Nawaz, Riku Klen, Abdulhamit Subasi, Tomi Westerlund, Wei Chen

arxiv logopreprintMay 8 2025
Early detection and accurate diagnosis are essential to improving patient outcomes. The use of convolutional neural networks (CNNs) for tumor detection has shown promise, but existing models often suffer from overparameterization, which limits their performance gains. In this study, fuzzy sigmoid convolution (FSC) is introduced along with two additional modules: top-of-the-funnel and middle-of-the-funnel. The proposed methodology significantly reduces the number of trainable parameters without compromising classification accuracy. A novel convolutional operator is central to this approach, effectively dilating the receptive field while preserving input data integrity. This enables efficient feature map reduction and enhances the model's tumor detection capability. In the FSC-based model, fuzzy sigmoid activation functions are incorporated within convolutional layers to improve feature extraction and classification. The inclusion of fuzzy logic into the architecture improves its adaptability and robustness. Extensive experiments on three benchmark datasets demonstrate the superior performance and efficiency of the proposed model. The FSC-based architecture achieved classification accuracies of 99.17%, 99.75%, and 99.89% on three different datasets. The model employs 100 times fewer parameters than large-scale transfer learning architectures, highlighting its computational efficiency and suitability for detecting brain tumors early. This research offers lightweight, high-performance deep-learning models for medical imaging applications.

Automated Thoracolumbar Stump Rib Detection and Analysis in a Large CT Cohort

Hendrik Möller, Hanna Schön, Alina Dima, Benjamin Keinert-Weth, Robert Graf, Matan Atad, Johannes Paetzold, Friederike Jungmann, Rickmer Braren, Florian Kofler, Bjoern Menze, Daniel Rueckert, Jan S. Kirschke

arxiv logopreprintMay 8 2025
Thoracolumbar stump ribs are one of the essential indicators of thoracolumbar transitional vertebrae or enumeration anomalies. While some studies manually assess these anomalies and describe the ribs qualitatively, this study aims to automate thoracolumbar stump rib detection and analyze their morphology quantitatively. To this end, we train a high-resolution deep-learning model for rib segmentation and show significant improvements compared to existing models (Dice score 0.997 vs. 0.779, p-value < 0.01). In addition, we use an iterative algorithm and piece-wise linear interpolation to assess the length of the ribs, showing a success rate of 98.2%. When analyzing morphological features, we show that stump ribs articulate more posteriorly at the vertebrae (-19.2 +- 3.8 vs -13.8 +- 2.5, p-value < 0.01), are thinner (260.6 +- 103.4 vs. 563.6 +- 127.1, p-value < 0.01), and are oriented more downwards and sideways within the first centimeters in contrast to full-length ribs. We show that with partially visible ribs, these features can achieve an F1-score of 0.84 in differentiating stump ribs from regular ones. We publish the model weights and masks for public use.

FF-PNet: A Pyramid Network Based on Feature and Field for Brain Image Registration

Ying Zhang, Shuai Guo, Chenxi Sun, Yuchen Zhu, Jinhai Xiang

arxiv logopreprintMay 8 2025
In recent years, deformable medical image registration techniques have made significant progress. However, existing models still lack efficiency in parallel extraction of coarse and fine-grained features. To address this, we construct a new pyramid registration network based on feature and deformation field (FF-PNet). For coarse-grained feature extraction, we design a Residual Feature Fusion Module (RFFM), for fine-grained image deformation, we propose a Residual Deformation Field Fusion Module (RDFFM). Through the parallel operation of these two modules, the model can effectively handle complex image deformations. It is worth emphasizing that the encoding stage of FF-PNet only employs traditional convolutional neural networks without any attention mechanisms or multilayer perceptrons, yet it still achieves remarkable improvements in registration accuracy, fully demonstrating the superior feature decoding capabilities of RFFM and RDFFM. We conducted extensive experiments on the LPBA and OASIS datasets. The results show our network consistently outperforms popular methods in metrics like the Dice Similarity Coefficient.

MoRe-3DGSMR: Motion-resolved reconstruction framework for free-breathing pulmonary MRI based on 3D Gaussian representation

Tengya Peng, Ruyi Zha, Qing Zou

arxiv logopreprintMay 8 2025
This study presents an unsupervised, motion-resolved reconstruction framework for high-resolution, free-breathing pulmonary magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), utilizing a three-dimensional Gaussian representation (3DGS). The proposed method leverages 3DGS to address the challenges of motion-resolved 3D isotropic pulmonary MRI reconstruction by enabling data smoothing between voxels for continuous spatial representation. Pulmonary MRI data acquisition is performed using a golden-angle radial sampling trajectory, with respiratory motion signals extracted from the center of k-space in each radial spoke. Based on the estimated motion signal, the k-space data is sorted into multiple respiratory phases. A 3DGS framework is then applied to reconstruct a reference image volume from the first motion state. Subsequently, a patient-specific convolutional neural network is trained to estimate the deformation vector fields (DVFs), which are used to generate the remaining motion states through spatial transformation of the reference volume. The proposed reconstruction pipeline is evaluated on six datasets from six subjects and bench-marked against three state-of-the-art reconstruction methods. The experimental findings demonstrate that the proposed reconstruction framework effectively reconstructs high-resolution, motion-resolved pulmonary MR images. Compared with existing approaches, it achieves superior image quality, reflected by higher signal-to-noise ratio and contrast-to-noise ratio. The proposed unsupervised 3DGS-based reconstruction method enables accurate motion-resolved pulmonary MRI with isotropic spatial resolution. Its superior performance in image quality metrics over state-of-the-art methods highlights its potential as a robust solution for clinical pulmonary MR imaging.

A myocardial reorientation method based on feature point detection for quantitative analysis of PET myocardial perfusion imaging.

Shang F, Huo L, Gong T, Wang P, Shi X, Tang X, Liu S

pubmed logopapersMay 8 2025
Reorienting cardiac positron emission tomography (PET) images to the transaxial plane is essential for cardiac PET image analysis. This study aims to design a convolutional neural network (CNN) for automatic reorientation and evaluate its generalizability. An artificial intelligence (AI) method integrating U-Net and the differentiable spatial to numeric transform module (DSNT-U) was proposed to automatically position three feature points (P<sub>apex</sub>, P<sub>base</sub>, and P<sub>RV</sub>), with these three points manually located by an experienced radiologist as the reference standard (RS). A second radiologist performed manual location for reproducibility evaluation. The DSNT-U, initially trained and tested on a [<sup>11</sup>C]acetate dataset (training/testing: 40/17), was further compared with a CNN-spatial transformer network (CNN-STN). The network fine-tuned with 4 subjects was tested on a [<sup>13</sup>N]ammonia dataset (n = 30). The performance of the DSNT-U was evaluated in terms of coordinates, volume, and quantitative indexes (pharmacokinetic parameters and total perfusion deficit). The proposed DSNT-U successfully achieved automatic myocardial reorientation for both [<sup>11</sup>C]acetate and [<sup>13</sup>N]ammonia datasets. For the former dataset, the intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) between the coordinates predicted by the DSNT-U and the RS exceeded 0.876. The average normalized mean squared error (NMSE) between the short-axis (SA) images obtained through DSNT-U-based reorientation and the reference SA images was 0.051 ± 0.043. For pharmacokinetic parameters, the R² between the DSNT-U and the RS was larger than 0.968. Compared with the CNN-STN, the DSNT-U demonstrated a higher ICC between the estimated rigid transformation parameters and the RS. After fine-tuning on the [<sup>13</sup>N]ammonia dataset, the average NMSE between the SA images reoriented by the DSNT-U and the reference SA images was 0.056 ± 0.046. The ICC between the total perfusion deficit (TPD) values computed from DSNT-U-derived images and the reference values was 0.981. Furthermore, no significant differences were observed in the performance of the DSNT-U prediction among subjects with different genders or varying myocardial perfusion defect (MPD) statuses. The proposed DSNT-U can accurately position P<sub>apex</sub>, P<sub>base</sub>, and P<sub>RV</sub> on the [<sup>11</sup>C]acetate dataset. After fine-tuning, the positioning model can be applied to the [<sup>13</sup>N]ammonia perfusion dataset, demonstrating good generalization performance. This method can adapt to data of different genders (with or without MPD) and different tracers, displaying the potential to replace manual operations.

Impact of spectrum bias on deep learning-based stroke MRI analysis.

Krag CH, Müller FC, Gandrup KL, Plesner LL, Sagar MV, Andersen MB, Nielsen M, Kruuse C, Boesen M

pubmed logopapersMay 8 2025
To evaluate spectrum bias in stroke MRI analysis by excluding cases with uncertain acute ischemic lesions (AIL) and examining patient, imaging, and lesion factors associated with these cases. This single-center retrospective observational study included adults with brain MRIs for suspected stroke between January 2020 and April 2022. Diagnostic uncertain AIL were identified through reader disagreement or low certainty grading by a radiology resident, a neuroradiologist, and the original radiology report consisting of various neuroradiologists. A commercially available deep learning tool analyzing brain MRIs for AIL was evaluated to assess the impact of excluding uncertain cases on diagnostic odds ratios. Patient-related, MRI acquisition-related, and lesion-related factors were analyzed using the Wilcoxon rank sum test, χ2 test, and multiple logistic regression. The study was approved by the National Committee on Health Research Ethics. In 989 patients (median age 73 (IQR: 59-80), 53% female), certain AIL were found in 374 (38%), uncertain AIL in 63 (6%), and no AIL in 552 (56%). Excluding uncertain cases led to a four-fold increase in the diagnostic odds ratio (from 68 to 278), while a simulated case-control design resulted in a six-fold increase compared to the full disease spectrum (from 68 to 431). Independent factors associated with uncertain AIL were MRI artifacts, smaller lesion size, older lesion age, and infratentorial location. Excluding uncertain cases leads to a four-fold overestimation of the diagnostic odds ratio. MRI artifacts, smaller lesion size, infratentorial location, and older lesion age are associated with uncertain AIL and should be accounted for in validation studies.
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