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[Practical artificial intelligence for urology : Technical principles, current application and future implementation of AI in practice].

Rodler S, Hügelmann K, von Knobloch HC, Weiss ML, Buck L, Kohler J, Fabian A, Jarczyk J, Nuhn P

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
Artificial intelligence (AI) is a disruptive technology that is currently finding widespread application after having long been confined to the domain of specialists. In urology, in particular, new fields of application are continuously emerging, which are being studied both in preclinical basic research and in clinical applications. Potential applications include image recognition in the operating room or interpreting images from radiology and pathology, the automatic measurement of urinary stones and radiotherapy. Certain medical devices, particularly in the field of AI-based predictive biomarkers, have already been incorporated into international guidelines. In addition, AI is playing an increasingly more important role in administrative tasks and is expected to lead to enormous changes, especially in the outpatient sector. For urologists, it is becoming increasingly more important to engage with this technology, to pursue appropriate training and therefore to optimally implement AI into the treatment of patients and in the management of their practices or hospitals.

Refining cardiac segmentation from MRI volumes with CT labels for fine anatomy of the ascending aorta.

Oda H, Wakamori M, Akita T

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is time-consuming, posing challenges in capturing clear images of moving organs, such as cardiac structures, including complex structures such as the Valsalva sinus. This study evaluates a computed tomography (CT)-guided refinement approach for cardiac segmentation from MRI volumes, focused on preserving the detailed shape of the Valsalva sinus. Owing to the low spatial contrast around the Valsalva sinus in MRI, labels from separate computed tomography (CT) volumes are used to refine the segmentation. Deep learning techniques are employed to obtain initial segmentation from MRI volumes, followed by the detection of the ascending aorta's proximal point. This detected proximal point is then used to select the most similar label from CT volumes of other patients. Non-rigid registration is further applied to refine the segmentation. Experiments conducted on 20 MRI volumes with labels from 20 CT volumes exhibited a slight decrease in quantitative segmentation accuracy. The CT-guided method demonstrated the precision (0.908), recall (0.746), and Dice score (0.804) for the ascending aorta compared with those obtained by nnU-Net alone (0.903, 0.770, and 0.816, respectively). Although some outputs showed bulge-like structures near the Valsalva sinus, an improvement in quantitative segmentation accuracy could not be validated.

Machine learning-based construction and validation of an radiomics model for predicting ISUP grading in prostate cancer: a multicenter radiomics study based on [68Ga]Ga-PSMA PET/CT.

Zhang H, Jiang X, Yang G, Tang Y, Qi L, Chen M, Hu S, Gao X, Zhang M, Chen S, Cai Y

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
The International Society of Urological Pathology (ISUP) grading of prostate cancer (PCa) is a crucial factor in the management and treatment planning for PCa patients. An accurate and non-invasive assessment of the ISUP grading group could significantly improve biopsy decisions and treatment planning. The use of PSMA-PET/CT radiomics for predicting ISUP has not been widely studied. The aim of this study is to investigate the role of <sup>68</sup>Ga-PSMA PET/CT radiomics in predicting the ISUP grading of primary PCa. This study included 415 PCa patients who underwent <sup>68</sup>Ga-PSMA PET/CT scans before prostate biopsy or radical prostatectomy. Patients were from three centers: Xiangya Hospital, Central South University (252 cases), Qilu Hospital of Shandong University (External Validation 1, 108 cases), and Qingdao University Medical College (External Validation 2, 55 cases). Xiangya Hospital cases were split into training and testing groups (1:1 ratio), with the other centers serving as external validation groups. Feature selection was performed using Minimum Redundancy Maximum Relevance (mRMR) and Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) algorithms. Eight machine learning classifiers were trained and tested with ten-fold cross-validation. Sensitivity, specificity, and AUC were calculated for each model. Additionally, we combined the radiomic features with maximum Standardized Uptake Value (SUVmax) and prostate-specific antigen (PSA) to create prediction models and tested the corresponding performances. The best-performing model in the Xiangya Hospital training cohort achieved an AUC of 0.868 (sensitivity 72.7%, specificity 96.0%). Similar trends were seen in the testing cohort and external validation centers (AUCs: 0.860, 0.827, and 0.812). After incorporating PSA and SUVmax, a more robust model was developed, achieving an AUC of 0.892 (sensitivity 77.9%, specificity 96.0%) in the training group. This study established and validated a radiomics model based on <sup>68</sup>Ga-PSMA PET/CT, offering an accurate, non-invasive method for predicting ISUP grades in prostate cancer. A multicenter design with external validation ensured the model's robustness and broad applicability. This is the largest study to date on PSMA radiomics for predicting ISUP grades. Notably, integrating SUVmax and PSA metrics with radiomic features significantly improved prediction accuracy, providing new insights and tools for personalized diagnosis and treatment.

Bedside Ultrasound Vector Doppler Imaging System with GPU Processing and Deep Learning.

Nahas H, Yiu BYS, Chee AJY, Ishii T, Yu ACH

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
Recent innovations in vector flow imaging promise to bring the modality closer to clinical application and allow for more comprehensive high-frame-rate vascular assessments. One such innovation is plane-wave multi-angle vector Doppler, where pulsed Doppler principles from multiple steering angles are used to realize vector flow imaging at frame rates upward of 1,000 frames per second (fps). Currently, vector Doppler is limited by the presence of aliasing artifacts that have prevented its reliable realization at the bedside. In this work, we present a new aliasing-resistant vector Doppler imaging system that can be deployed at the bedside using a programmable ultrasound core, graphics processing unit (GPU) processing, and deep learning principles. The framework supports two operational modes: 1) live imaging at 17 fps where vector flow imaging serves to guide image view navigation in blood vessels with complex dynamics; 2) on-demand replay mode where flow data acquired at high frame rates of over 1,000 fps is depicted as a slow-motion playback at 60 fps using an aliasing-resistant vector projectile visualization. Using our new system, aliasing-free vector flow cineloops were successfully obtained in a stenosis phantom experiment and in human bifurcation imaging scans. This system represents a major engineering advance towards the clinical adoption of vector flow imaging.

Prompt learning with bounding box constraints for medical image segmentation.

Gaillochet M, Noori M, Dastani S, Desrosiers C, Lombaert H

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
Pixel-wise annotations are notoriously labourious and costly to obtain in the medical domain. To mitigate this burden, weakly supervised approaches based on bounding box annotations-much easier to acquire-offer a practical alternative. Vision foundation models have recently shown noteworthy segmentation performance when provided with prompts such as points or bounding boxes. Prompt learning exploits these models by adapting them to downstream tasks and automating segmentation, thereby reducing user intervention. However, existing prompt learning approaches depend on fully annotated segmentation masks. This paper proposes a novel framework that combines the representational power of foundation models with the annotation efficiency of weakly supervised segmentation. More specifically, our approach automates prompt generation for foundation models using only bounding box annotations. Our proposed optimization scheme integrates multiple constraints derived from box annotations with pseudo-labels generated by the prompted foundation model. Extensive experiments across multi-modal datasets reveal that our weakly supervised method achieves an average Dice score of 84.90% in a limited data setting, outperforming existing fully-supervised and weakly-supervised approaches. The code will be available upon acceptance.

Preoperative Assessment of Lymph Node Metastasis in Rectal Cancer Using Deep Learning: Investigating the Utility of Various MRI Sequences.

Zhao J, Zheng P, Xu T, Feng Q, Liu S, Hao Y, Wang M, Zhang C, Xu J

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
This study aimed to develop a deep learning (DL) model based on three-dimensional multi-parametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) for preoperative assessment of lymph node metastasis (LNM) in rectal cancer (RC) and to investigate the contribution of different MRI sequences. A total of 613 eligible patients with RC from four medical centres who underwent preoperative mpMRI were retrospectively enrolled and randomly assigned to training (n = 372), validation (n = 106), internal test (n = 88) and external test (n = 47) cohorts. A multi-parametric multi-scale EfficientNet (MMENet) was designed to effectively extract LNM-related features from mpMR for preoperative LNM assessment. Its performance was compared with other DL models and radiologists using metrics of area under the receiver operating curve (AUC), accuracy (ACC), sensitivity, specificity and average precision with 95% confidence interval (CI). To investigate the utility of various MRI sequences, the performances of the mono-parametric model and the MMENet with different sequences combinations as input were compared. The MMENet using a combination of T2WI, DWI and DCE sequence achieved an AUC of 0.808 (95% CI 0.720-0.897) with an ACC of 71.6% (95% CI 62.3-81.0) in the internal test cohort and an AUC of 0.782 (95% CI 0.636-0.925) with an ACC of 76.6% (95% CI 64.6-88.6) in the external test cohort, outperforming the mono-parametric model, the MMENet with other sequences combinations and the radiologists. The MMENet, leveraging a combination of T2WI, DWI and DCE sequences, can accurately assess LNM in RC preoperatively and holds great promise for automated evaluation of LNM in clinical practice.

Comprehensive predictive modeling in subarachnoid hemorrhage: integrating radiomics and clinical variables.

Urbanos G, Castaño-León AM, Maldonado-Luna M, Salvador E, Ramos A, Lechuga C, Sanz C, Juárez E, Lagares A

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
Subarachnoid hemorrhage (SAH) is a severe condition with high morbidity and long-term neurological consequences. Radiomics, by extracting quantitative features from Computed Tomograhpy (CT) scans, may reveal imaging biomarkers predictive of outcomes. This study evaluates the predictive value of radiomics in SAH for multiple outcomes and compares its performance to models based on clinical data.Radiomic features were extracted from admission CTs using segmentations of brain tissue (white and gray matter) and hemorrhage. Machine learning models with cross-validation were trained using clinical data, radiomics, or both, to predict 6-month mortality, Glasgow Outcome Scale (GOS), vasospasm, and long-term hydrocephalus. SHapley Additive exPlanations (SHAP) analysis was used to interpret feature contributions.The training dataset included 403 aneurysmal SAH patients; GOS predictions used all patients, while vasospasm and hydrocephalus predictions excluded those with incomplete data or early death, leaving 328 and 332 patients, respectively. Radiomics and clinical models demonstrated comparable performance, achieving in validation set AUCs more than 85% for six-month mortality and clinical outcome, and 75% and 86% for vasospasm and hydrocephalus, respectively. In an independent cohort of 41 patients, the combined models yielded AUCs of 89% for mortality, 87% for clinical outcome, 66% for vasospasm, and 72% for hydrocephalus. SHAP analysis highlighted significant contributions of radiomic features from brain tissue and hemorrhage segmentation, alongside key clinical variables, in predicting SAH outcomes.This study underscores the potential of radiomics-based approaches for SAH outcome prediction, demonstrating predictive power comparable to traditional clinical models and enhancing understanding of SAH-related complications.Clinical trial number Not applicable.

Validation of a Pretrained Artificial Intelligence Model for Pancreatic Cancer Detection on Diagnosis and Prediagnosis Computed Tomography Scans.

Degand L, Abi-Nader C, Bône A, Vetil R, Placido D, Chmura P, Rohé MM, De Masi F, Brunak S

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
To evaluate PANCANAI, a previously developed AI model for pancreatic cancer (PC) detection, on a longitudinal cohort of patients. In particular, aiming for PC detection on scans acquired before histopathologic diagnosis was assessed. The model has been previously trained to predict PC suspicion on 2134 portal venous CTs. In this study, the algorithm was evaluated on a retrospective cohort of Danish patients with biopsy-confirmed PC and with CT scans acquired between 2006 and 2016. The sensitivity was measured, and bootstrapping was performed to provide median and 95% CI. The study included 1083 PC patients (mean age: 69 y ± 11, 575 men). CT scans were divided into 2 groups: (1) concurrent diagnosis (CD): 1022 CT scans acquired within 2 months around histopathologic diagnosis, and (2) prediagnosis (PD): 198 CT scans acquired before histopathologic diagnosis (median 7 months before diagnosis). The sensitivity was 91.8% (938 of 1022; 95% CI: 89.9-93.5) and 68.7% (137 of 198; 95% CI: 62.1-75.3) on the CD and PD groups, respectively. Sensitivity on CT scans acquired 1 year or more before diagnosis was 53.9% (36 of 67; 95% CI: 41.8-65.7). Sensitivity on CT scans acquired at stage I was 82.9% (29 of 35; 95% CI: 68.6-94.3). PANCANAI showed high sensitivity for automatic PC detection on a large retrospective cohort of biopsy-confirmed patients. PC suspicion was detected in more than half of the CT scans that were acquired at least a year before histopathologic diagnosis.

Advances and Integrations of Computer-Assisted Planning, Artificial Intelligence, and Predictive Modeling Tools for Laser Interstitial Thermal Therapy in Neurosurgical Oncology.

Warman A, Moorthy D, Gensler R, Horowtiz MA, Ellis J, Tomasovic L, Srinivasan E, Ahmed K, Azad TD, Anderson WS, Rincon-Torroella J, Bettegowda C

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
Laser interstitial thermal therapy (LiTT) has emerged as a minimally invasive, MRI-guided treatment of brain tumors that are otherwise considered inoperable because of their location or the patient's poor surgical candidacy. By directing thermal energy at neoplastic lesions while minimizing damage to surrounding healthy tissue, LiTT offers promising therapeutic outcomes for both newly diagnosed and recurrent tumors. However, challenges such as postprocedural edema, unpredictable heat diffusion near blood vessels and ventricles in real time underscore the need for improved planning and monitoring. Incorporating artificial intelligence (AI) presents a viable solution to many of these obstacles. AI has already demonstrated effectiveness in optimizing surgical trajectories, predicting seizure-free outcomes in epilepsy cases, and generating heat distribution maps to guide real-time ablation. This technology could be similarly deployed in neurosurgical oncology to identify patients most likely to benefit from LiTT, refine trajectory planning, and predict tissue-specific heat responses. Despite promising initial studies, further research is needed to establish the robust data sets and clinical trials necessary to develop and validate AI-driven LiTT protocols. Such advancements have the potential to bolster LiTT's efficacy, minimize complications, and ultimately transform the neurosurgical management of primary and metastatic brain tumors.

Non-invasive prediction of NSCLC immunotherapy efficacy and tumor microenvironment through unsupervised machine learning-driven CT Radiomic subtypes: a multi-cohort study.

Guo Y, Gong B, Li Y, Mo P, Chen Y, Fan Q, Sun Q, Miao L, Li Y, Liu Y, Tan W, Yang L, Zheng C

pubmed logopapersJun 24 2025
Radiomics analyzes quantitative features from medical images to reveal tumor heterogeneity, offering new insights for diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment prediction. This study explored radiomics based biomarkers to predict immunotherapy response and its association with the tumor microenvironment in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) using unsupervised machine learning models derived from CT imaging. This study included 1539 NSCLC patients from seven independent cohorts. For 1834 radiomic features extracted from 869 NSCLC patients, K-means unsupervised clustering was applied to identify radiomic subtypes. A random forest model extended subtype classification to external cohorts, model accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity were evaluated. By conducting bulk RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) and single-cell transcriptome sequencing (scRNA-seq) of tumors, the immune microenvironment characteristics of tumors can be obtained to evaluate the association between radiomic subtypes and immunotherapy efficacy, immune scores, and immune cells infiltration. Unsupervised clustering stratified NSCLC patients into two subtypes (Cluster 1 and Cluster 2). Principal component analysis confirmed significant distinctions between subtypes across all cohorts. Cluster 2 exhibited significantly longer median overall survival (35 vs. 30 months, P = 0.006) and progression-free survival (19 vs. 16 months, P = 0.020) compared to Cluster 1. Multivariate Cox regression identified radiomic subtype as an independent predictor of overall survival (HR: 0.738, 95% CI 0.583-0.935, P = 0.012), validated in two external cohorts. Bulk RNA seq showed elevated interaction signaling and immune scores in Cluster 2 and scRNA-seq demonstrated higher proportions of T cells, B cells, and NK cells in Cluster 2. This study establishes a radiomic subtype associated with NSCLC immunotherapy efficacy and tumor immune microenvironment. The findings provide a non-invasive tool for personalized treatment, enabling early identification of immunotherapy-responsive patients and optimized therapeutic strategies.
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