Synthetic optical coherence tomography angiographs for detailed retinal vessel segmentation without human annotations.
Journal
IEEE transactions on medical imaging
ISSN: 1558-254X
Titre abrégé: IEEE Trans Med Imaging
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 8310780
Informations de publication
Date de publication:
15 Jan 2024
15 Jan 2024
Historique:
medline:
15
1
2024
pubmed:
15
1
2024
entrez:
15
1
2024
Statut:
aheadofprint
Résumé
Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) is a non-invasive imaging modality that can acquire high-resolution volumes of the retinal vasculature and aid the diagnosis of ocular, neurological and cardiac diseases. Segmenting the visible blood vessels is a common first step when extracting quantitative biomarkers from these images. Classical segmentation algorithms based on thresholding are strongly affected by image artifacts and limited signal-to-noise ratio. The use of modern, deep learning-based segmentation methods has been inhibited by a lack of large datasets with detailed annotations of the blood vessels. To address this issue, recent work has employed transfer learning, where a segmentation network is trained on synthetic OCTA images and is then applied to real data. However, the previously proposed simulations fail to faithfully model the retinal vasculature and do not provide effective domain adaptation. Because of this, current methods are unable to fully segment the retinal vasculature, in particular the smallest capillaries. In this work, we present a lightweight simulation of the retinal vascular network based on space colonization for faster and more realistic OCTA synthesis. We then introduce three contrast adaptation pipelines to decrease the domain gap between real and artificial images. We demonstrate the superior segmentation performance of our approach in extensive quantitative and qualitative experiments on three public datasets that compare our method to traditional computer vision algorithms and supervised training using human annotations. Finally, we make our entire pipeline publicly available, including the source code, pretrained models, and a large dataset of synthetic OCTA images.
Identifiants
pubmed: 38224512
doi: 10.1109/TMI.2024.3354408
doi:
Types de publication
Journal Article
Langues
eng
Sous-ensembles de citation
IM