Litcius/Paper detail

Assessing radiomics feature stability with simulated CT acquisitions

Kyriakos Flouris, Oscar Jiménez–del–Toro, Christoph Aberle, Michael Bach, Roger Schaer, Markus M. Obmann, Bram Stieltjes, Henning Müller, Adrien Depeursinge, Ender Konukoğlu

2022Scientific Reports15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Medical imaging quantitative features had once disputable usefulness in clinical studies. Nowadays, advancements in analysis techniques, for instance through machine learning, have enabled quantitative features to be progressively useful in diagnosis and research. Tissue characterisation is improved via the "radiomics" features, whose extraction can be automated. Despite the advances, stability of quantitative features remains an important open problem. As features can be highly sensitive to variations of acquisition details, it is not trivial to quantify stability and efficiently select stable features. In this work, we develop and validate a Computed Tomography (CT) simulator environment based on the publicly available ASTRA toolbox ( www.astra-toolbox.com ). We show that the variability, stability and discriminative power of the radiomics features extracted from the virtual phantom images generated by the simulator are similar to those observed in a tandem phantom study. Additionally, we show that the variability is matched between a multi-center phantom study and simulated results. Consequently, we demonstrate that the simulator can be utilised to assess radiomics features' stability and discriminative power.

Topics & Concepts

Discriminative modelComputer scienceToolboxRadiomicsImaging phantomArtificial intelligenceStability (learning theory)Machine learningFeature (linguistics)Pattern recognition (psychology)Feature extractionData miningNuclear medicineMedicinePhilosophyLinguisticsProgramming languageRadiomics and Machine Learning in Medical ImagingAdvanced X-ray and CT ImagingMedical Imaging Techniques and Applications
Assessing radiomics feature stability with simulated CT acquisitions | Litcius