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Papale, A. J., Flattau, R., Vithlani, N., Mahajan, D., Ziemba, Y., Zavadsky, T., Carvino, A., King, D., Nadella, S.

medrxiv logopreprintJul 17 2025
Pancreatic cystic lesions (PCLs) are often discovered incidentally on imaging and may progress to pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). PCLs have a high incidence in the general population, and adherence to screening guidelines can be variable. With the advent of technologies that enable automated text classification, we sought to evaluate various natural language processing (NLP) tools including large language models (LLMs) for identifying and classifying PCLs from radiology reports. We correlated our classification of PCLs to clinical features to identify risk factors for a positive PDAC biopsy. We contrasted a previously described NLP classifier to LLMs for prospective identification of PCLs in radiology. We evaluated various LLMs for PCL classification into low-risk or high-risk categories based on published guidelines. We compared prompt-based PCL classification to specific entity-guided PCL classification. To this end, we developed tools to deidentify radiology and track patients longitudinally based on their radiology reports. Additionally, we used our newly developed tools to evaluate a retrospective database of patients who underwent pancreas biopsy to determine associated factors including those in their radiology reports and clinical features using multivariable logistic regression modelling. Of 14,574 prospective radiology reports, 665 (4.6%) described a pancreatic cyst, including 175 (1.2%) high-risk lesions. Our Entity-Extraction Large Language Model tool achieved recall 0.992 (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.985-0.998), precision 0.988 (0.979-0.996), and F1-score 0.990 (0.985-0.995) for detecting cysts; F1-scores were 0.993 (0.987-0.998) for low-risk and 0.977 (0.952-0.995) for high-risk classification. Among 4,285 biopsy patients, 330 had pancreatic cysts documented [≥]6 months before biopsy. In the final multivariable model (AUC = 0.877), independent predictors of adenocarcinoma were change in duct caliber with upstream atrophy (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 4.94; 95% CI, 1.30-18.79), mural nodules (AOR, 11.02; 1.81-67.26), older age (AOR, 1.10; 1.05-1.16), lower body mass index (AOR, 0.86; 0.76-0.96), and total bilirubin (AOR, 1.81; 1.18-2.77). Automated NLP-based analysis of radiology reports using LLM-driven entity extraction can accurately identify and risk-stratify PCLs and, when retrospectively applied, reveal factors predicting malignant progression. Widespread implementation may improve surveillance and enable earlier intervention.

Ammann, C., Gröschel, J., Saad, H., Rospleszcz, S., Schuppert, C., Hadler, T., Hickstein, R., Niendorf, T., Nolde, J. M., Schulze, M. B., Greiser, K. H., Decker, J. A., Kröncke, T., Küstner, T., Nikolaou, K., Willich, S. N., Keil, T., Dörr, M., Bülow, R., Bamberg, F., Pischon, T., Schlett, C. L., Schulz-Menger, J.

medrxiv logopreprintJul 17 2025
Background and AimsIn cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR), myocardial native T1 mapping enables quantitative, non-invasive tissue characterization and is sensitive to subclinical changes in myocardial structure and composition. We investigated how age, sex, and cardiometabolic risk factors are associated with myocardial T1 in a population-based analysis within the German National Cohort (NAKO). MethodsThis cross-sectional study included 29,573 prospectively enrolled participants who underwent CMR-based midventricular T1 mapping at 3.0 T, alongside clinical phenotyping. After artificial intelligence-assisted myocardial segmentation, a subset of 9,162 outliers was subjected to manual quality control according to clinical evaluation standards. Associations with cardiometabolic risk factors, identified through self-reported medical history, clinical chemistry, and blood pressure measurements, were evaluated using adjusted linear regression models. ResultsWomen had higher T1 values than men, with sex differences progressively declining with age. T1 was significantly elevated in individuals with diabetes ({beta}=3.91 ms; p<0.001), kidney disease ({beta}=3.44 ms; p<0.001), and current smoking ({beta}=6.67 ms; p<0.001). Conversely, hyperlipidaemia was significantly associated with lower T1 ({beta}=-4.41 ms; p<0.001). Associations with hypertension showed a sex-specific pattern: T1 was lower in women but increased with hypertension severity in men. ConclusionsMyocardial native T1 varies by sex and age and shows associations with major cardiometabolic risk factors. Notably, lower T1 times in participants with hyperlipidaemia may indicate a direct effect of blood lipids on the heart. Our findings support the utility of T1 mapping as a sensitive marker of early myocardial changes and highlight the sex-specific interplay between cardiometabolic health and myocardial tissue composition. Graphical Abstract O_FIG O_LINKSMALLFIG WIDTH=200 HEIGHT=139 SRC="FIGDIR/small/25331651v1_ufig1.gif" ALT="Figure 1"> View larger version (44K): [email protected]@131514borg.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@d03877org.highwire.dtl.DTLVardef@2b2fec_HPS_FORMAT_FIGEXP M_FIG C_FIG Key QuestionHow are age, sex, and cardiometabolic risk factors associated with myocardial native T1, a quantitative magnetic resonance imaging marker of myocardial tissue composition, in a large-scale population-based evaluation within the German National Cohort (NAKO)? Key FindingT1 relaxation times were higher in women and gradually converged between sexes with age. Diabetes, kidney disease, smoking, and hypertension in men were associated with prolonged T1 times. Unexpectedly, hyperlipidaemia and hypertension in women showed a negative association with T1. Take-Home MessageNative T1 mapping is sensitive to subclinical myocardial changes and reflects a close interplay between metabolic and myocardial health. It reveals marked age-dependent sex differences and sex-specific responses in myocardial tissue composition to cardiometabolic risk factors.

Ogier, A. C., Baup, S., Ilanjian, G., Touray, A., Rocca, A., Banus Cobo, J., Monton Quesada, I., Nicoletti, M., Ledoux, J.-B., Richiardi, J., Holtackers, R. J., Yerly, J., Stuber, M., Hullin, R., Rotzinger, D., van Heeswijk, R. B.

medrxiv logopreprintJul 17 2025
BackgroundFree-running (FR) cardiac MRI enables free-breathing ECG-free fully dynamic 5D (3D spatial+cardiac+respiration dimensions) imaging but poses significant challenges for clinical integration due to the volume and complexity of image analysis. Existing segmentation methods are tailored to 2D cine or static 3D acquisitions and cannot leverage the unique spatial-temporal wealth of FR data. PurposeTo develop and validate a deep learning (DL)-based segmentation framework for isotropic 3D+cardiac cycle FR cardiac MRI that enables accurate, fast, and clinically meaningful anatomical and functional analysis. MethodsFree-running, contrast-free bSSFP acquisitions at 1.5T and contrast-enhanced GRE acquisitions at 3T were used to reconstruct motion-resolved 5D datasets. From these, the end-expiratory respiratory phase was retained to yield fully isotropic 4D datasets. Automatic propagation of a limited set of manual segmentations was used to segment the left and right ventricular blood pool (LVB, RVB) and left ventricular myocardium (LVM) on reformatted short-axis (SAX) end-systolic (ES) and end-diastolic (ED) images. These were used to train a 3D nnU-Net model. Validation was performed using geometric metrics (Dice similarity coefficient [DSC], relative volume difference [RVD]), clinical metrics (ED and ES volumes, ejection fraction [EF]), and physiological consistency metrics (systole-diastole LVM volume mismatch and LV-RV stroke volume agreement). To assess the robustness and flexibility of the approach, we evaluated multiple additional DL training configurations such as using 4D propagation-based data augmentation to incorporate all cardiac phases into training. ResultsThe main proposed method achieved automatic segmentation within a minute, delivering high geometric accuracy and consistency (DSC: 0.94 {+/-} 0.01 [LVB], 0.86 {+/-} 0.02 [LVM], 0.92 {+/-} 0.01 [RVB]; RVD: 2.7%, 5.8%, 4.5%). Clinical LV metrics showed excellent agreement (ICC > 0.98 for EDV/ESV/EF, bias < 2 mL for EDV/ESV, < 1% for EF), while RV metrics remained clinically reliable (ICC > 0.93 for EDV/ESV/EF, bias < 1 mL for EDV/ESV, < 1% for EF) but exhibited wider limits of agreement. Training on all cardiac phases improved temporal coherence, reducing LVM volume mismatch from 4.0% to 2.6%. ConclusionThis study validates a DL-based method for fast and accurate segmentation of whole-heart free-running 4D cardiac MRI. Robust performance across diverse protocols and evaluation with complementary metrics that match state-of-the-art benchmarks supports its integration into clinical and research workflows, helping to overcome a key barrier to the broader adoption of free-running imaging.

Jiang S, Wang L, Li Y, Yang Z, Zhou Z, Li B

pubmed logopapersJul 16 2025
Intraoperative brain ultrasound (US) provides real-time information on lesions and tissues, making it crucial for brain tumor resection. However, due to limitations such as imaging angles and operator techniques, US data is limited in size and difficult to annotate, hindering advancements in intelligent image processing. In contrast, Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) data is more abundant and easier to annotate. If MRI data and models can be effectively transferred to the US domain, generating high-quality US data would greatly enhance US image processing and improve intraoperative US readability.&#xD;Approach. We propose a Cross-Modal Conditional Latent Diffusion Model (CCLD) for brain MRI-to-US image translation. We employ a noise mask restoration strategy to pretrain an efficient encoder-decoder, enhancing feature extraction, compression, and reconstruction capabilities while reducing computational costs. Furthermore, CCLD integrates the Frequency-Decomposed Feature Optimization Module (FFOM) and the Adaptive Multi-Frequency Feature Fusion Module (AMFM) to effectively leverage MRI structural information and US texture characteristics, ensuring structural accuracy while enhancing texture details in the synthetic US images.&#xD;Main results. Compared with state-of-the-art methods, our approach achieves superior performance on the ReMIND dataset, obtaining the best Learned Perceptual Image Patch Similarity (LPIPS) score of 19.1%, Mean Absolute Error (MAE) of 4.21%, as well as the highest Peak Signal-to-Noise Ratio (PSNR) of 25.36 dB and Structural Similarity Index (SSIM) of 86.91%. &#xD;Significance. Experimental results demonstrate that CCLD effectively improves the quality and realism of synthetic ultrasound images, offering a new research direction for the generation of high-quality US datasets and the enhancement of ultrasound image readability.&#xD.

Samuel Rot, Iulius Dragonu, Christina Triantafyllou, Matthew Grech-Sollars, Anastasia Papadaki, Laura Mancini, Stephen Wastling, Jennifer Steeden, John Thornton, Tarek Yousry, Claudia A. M. Gandini Wheeler-Kingshott, David L. Thomas, Daniel C. Alexander, Hui Zhang

arxiv logopreprintJul 16 2025
Purpose: The clinical feasibility and translation of many advanced quantitative MRI (qMRI) techniques are inhibited by their restriction to 'research mode', due to resource-intensive, offline parameter estimation. This work aimed to achieve 'clinical mode' qMRI, by real-time, inline parameter estimation with a trained neural network (NN) fully integrated into a vendor's image reconstruction environment, therefore facilitating and encouraging clinical adoption of advanced qMRI techniques. Methods: The Siemens Image Calculation Environment (ICE) pipeline was customised to deploy trained NNs for advanced diffusion MRI parameter estimation with Open Neural Network Exchange (ONNX) Runtime. Two fully-connected NNs were trained offline with data synthesised with the neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging (NODDI) model, using either conventionally estimated (NNMLE) or ground truth (NNGT) parameters as training labels. The strategy was demonstrated online with an in vivo acquisition and evaluated offline with synthetic test data. Results: NNs were successfully integrated and deployed natively in ICE, performing inline, whole-brain, in vivo NODDI parameter estimation in <10 seconds. DICOM parametric maps were exported from the scanner for further analysis, generally finding that NNMLE estimates were more consistent than NNGT with conventional estimates. Offline evaluation confirms that NNMLE has comparable accuracy and slightly better noise robustness than conventional fitting, whereas NNGT exhibits compromised accuracy at the benefit of higher noise robustness. Conclusion: Real-time, inline parameter estimation with the proposed generalisable framework resolves a key practical barrier to clinical uptake of advanced qMRI methods and enables their efficient integration into clinical workflows.

Bando K, Honda T, Ishikawa K, Shirai S, Yabe I, Ishihara T, Onodera O, Higashiyama Y, Tanaka F, Kishimoto Y, Katsuno M, Shimizu T, Hanajima R, Kanata T, Takahashi Y, MizusawaMD H

pubmed logopapersJul 16 2025
Degenerative cerebellar ataxia, a group of progressive neurodegenerative disorders, is characterised by cerebellar atrophy and impaired motor learning. Using CerebNet, a deep learning algorithm for cerebellar segmentation, this study investigated the relationship between cerebellar subregion volumes and motor learning ability. We analysed data from 37 patients with degenerative cerebellar ataxia and 18 healthy controls. Using CerebNet, we segmented four cerebellar subregions: the anterior lobe, superior posterior lobe, inferior posterior lobe, and vermis. Regression analyses examined the associations between cerebellar volumes and motor learning performance (adaptation index [AI]) and ataxia severity (Scale for Assessment and Rating of Ataxia [SARA]). The inferior posterior lobe volume showed a significant positive association with AI in both single (B = 0.09; 95% CI: [0.03, 0.16]) and multiple linear regression analyses (B = 0.11; 95% CI: [0.008, 0.20]), an association that was particularly evident in the pure cerebellar ataxia subgroup. SARA scores correlated with anterior lobe, superior posterior lobe, and vermis volumes in single linear regression analyses, but these associations were not maintained in multiple linear regression analyses. This selective association suggests a specialised role for the inferior posterior lobe in motor learning processes. This study reveals the inferior posterior lobe's distinct role in motor learning in patients with degenerative cerebellar ataxia, advancing our understanding of cerebellar function and potentially informing targeted rehabilitation approaches. Our findings highlight the value of advanced imaging technologies in understanding structure-function relationships in cerebellar disorders.

Lin G, Chen W, Chen Y, Cao J, Mao W, Xia S, Chen M, Xu M, Lu C, Ji J

pubmed logopapersJul 16 2025
This study evaluates the predictive ability of multiparametric dual-energy computed tomography (multi-DECT) radiomics for tumor budding (TB) grade and prognosis in patients with colorectal cancer (CRC). This study comprised 510 CRC patients at two institutions. The radiomics features of multi-DECT images (including polyenergetic, virtual monoenergetic, iodine concentration [IC], and effective atomic number images) were screened to build radiomics models utilizing nine machine learning (ML) algorithms. An ML-based fusion model comprising clinical-radiological variables and radiomics features was developed. The assessment of model performance was conducted through the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), while the model's interpretability was assessed by shapley additive explanation (SHAP). The prognostic significance of the fusion model was determined via survival analysis. The CT-reported lymph node status and normalized IC were used to develop a clinical-radiological model. Among the nine examined ML algorithms, the extreme gradient boosting (XGB) algorithm performed best. The XGB-based fusion model containing multi-DECT radiomics features outperformed the clinical-radiological model in predicting TB grade, demonstrating superior AUCs of 0.969 in the training cohort, 0.934 in the internal validation cohort, and 0.897 in the external validation cohort. The SHAP analysis identified variables influencing model predictions. Patients with a model-predicted high TB grade had worse recurrence-free survival (RFS) in both the training (P < 0.001) and internal validation (P = 0.016) cohorts. The XGB-based fusion model using multi-DECT radiomics could serve as a non-invasive tool to predict TB grade and RFS in patients with CRC preoperatively.

Zhu Z, Liu J, Hong CW, Houshmand S, Wang K, Yang Y

pubmed logopapersJul 16 2025
<b>BACKGROUND</b>. The American College of Radiology (ACR) Incidental Findings Committee (IFC) algorithm provides guidance for pancreatic cystic lesion (PCL) management. Its implementation using plain-text large language model (LLM) solutions is challenging given that key components include multimodal data (e.g., figures and tables). <b>OBJECTIVE</b>. The purpose of the study is to evaluate a multimodal LLM approach incorporating knowledge retrieval using flowchart embedding for forming follow-up recommendations for PCL management. <b>METHODS</b>. This retrospective study included patients who underwent abdominal CT or MRI from September 1, 2023, to September 1, 2024, and whose report mentioned a PCL. The reports' Findings sections were inputted to a multimodal LLM (GPT-4o). For task 1 (198 patients: mean age, 69.0 ± 13.0 [SD] years; 110 women, 88 men), the LLM assessed PCL features (presence of PCL, PCL size and location, presence of main pancreatic duct communication, presence of worrisome features or high-risk stigmata) and formed a follow-up recommendation using three knowledge retrieval methods (default knowledge, plain-text retrieval-augmented generation [RAG] from the ACR IFC algorithm PDF document, and flowchart embedding using the LLM's image-to-text conversion for in-context integration of the document's flowcharts and tables). For task 2 (85 patients: mean initial age, 69.2 ± 10.8 years; 48 women, 37 men), an additional relevant prior report was inputted; the LLM assessed for interval PCL change and provided an adjusted follow-up schedule accounting for prior imaging using flowchart embedding. Three radiologists assessed LLM accuracy in task 1 for PCL findings in consensus and follow-up recommendations independently; one radiologist assessed accuracy in task 2. <b>RESULTS</b>. For task 1, the LLM with flowchart embedding had accuracy for PCL features of 98.0-99.0%. The accuracy of the LLM follow-up recommendations based on default knowledge, plain-text RAG, and flowchart embedding for radiologist 1 was 42.4%, 23.7%, and 89.9% (<i>p</i> < .001), respectively; radiologist 2 was 39.9%, 24.2%, and 91.9% (<i>p</i> < .001); and radiologist 3 was 40.9%, 25.3%, and 91.9% (<i>p</i> < .001). For task 2, the LLM using flowchart embedding showed an accuracy for interval PCL change of 96.5% and for adjusted follow-up schedules of 81.2%. <b>CONCLUSION</b>. Multimodal flowchart embedding aided the LLM's automated provision of follow-up recommendations adherent to a clinical guidance document. <b>CLINICAL IMPACT</b>. The framework could be extended to other incidental findings through the use of other clinical guidance documents as the model input.

Takaishi T, Kawai T, Kokubo Y, Fujinaga T, Ojio Y, Yamamoto T, Hayashi K, Owatari Y, Ito H, Hiwatashi A

pubmed logopapersJul 16 2025
To develop and evaluate a deep learning model for detecting appendicitis on abdominal CT. This retrospective single-center study included 567 CTs of appendicitis patients (330 males, age range 20-96) obtained between 2011 and 2020, randomly split into training (n = 517) and validation (n = 50) sets. The validation set was supplemented with 50 control CTs performed for acute abdomen. For a test dataset, 100 appendicitis CTs and 100 control CTs were consecutively collected from a separate period after 2021. Exclusion criteria included age < 20, perforation, unclear appendix, and appendix tumors. Appendicitis CTs were annotated with three-dimensional bounding boxes that encompassed inflamed appendices. CT protocols were unenhanced, 5-mm slice-thickness, 512 × 512 pixel matrix. The deep learning algorithm was based on faster region convolutional neural network (Faster R-CNN). Two board-certified radiologists visually graded model predictions on the test dataset using a 5-point Likert scale (0: no detection, 1: false, 2: poor, 3: fair, 4: good), with scores ≥ 3 considered true positives. Inter-rater agreement was assessed using weighted kappa statistics. The effects of intra-abdominal fat, periappendiceal fat-stranding, presence of appendicolith, and appendix diameter on the model's recall were analyzed using binary logistic regression. The model showed a precision of 0.66 (87/132), a recall of 0.87 (87/100), and a false-positive rate per patient of 0.23 (45/200). The inter-rater agreement for Likert scores of 2-4 was κ = 0.76. The logistic regression analysis showed that only intra-abdominal fat had a significant impact on the model's precision (p = 0.02). We developed a model capable of detecting appendicitis on CT with a three-dimensional bounding box.

Wang F, Yu L

pubmed logopapersJul 16 2025
Foundation models have significantly revolutionized the field of chest X-ray diagnosis with their ability to transfer across various diseases and tasks. However, previous works have predominantly utilized self-supervised learning from medical image-text pairs, which falls short in dense medical prediction tasks due to their sole reliance on such coarse pair supervision, thereby limiting their applicability to detailed diagnostics. In this paper, we introduce a Dense Chest X-ray Foundation Model (DCXFM), which utilizes mixed supervision types (i.e., text, label, and segmentation masks) to significantly enhance the scalability of foundation models across various medical tasks. Our model involves two training stages: we first employ a novel self-distilled multimodal pretraining paradigm to exploit text and label supervision, along with local-to-global self-distillation and soft cross-modal contrastive alignment strategies to enhance localization capabilities. Subsequently, we introduce an efficient cost aggregation module, comprising spatial and class aggregation mechanisms, to further advance dense prediction tasks with densely annotated datasets. Comprehensive evaluations on three tasks (phrase grounding, zero-shot semantic segmentation, and zero-shot classification) demonstrate DCXFM's superior performance over other state-of-the-art medical image-text pretraining models. Remarkably, DCXFM exhibits powerful zero-shot capabilities across various datasets in phrase grounding and zero-shot semantic segmentation, underscoring its superior generalization in dense prediction tasks.
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