Although skull-stripping and brain region segmentation are essential for precise quantitative analysis of positron emission tomography (PET) of mouse brains, deep learning (DL)-based unified solutions, particularly for spatial normalization (SN), have posed a challenging problem in DL-based image processing. In this study, we propose an approach based on DL to resolve these issues. We generated both skull-stripping masks and individual brain-specific volumes-of-interest (VOIs-cortex, hippocampus, striatum, thalamus, and cerebellum) based on inverse spatial normalization (iSN) and deep convolutional neural network (deep CNN) models. We applied the proposed methods to mutated amyloid precursor protein and presenilin-1 mouse model of Alzheimer's disease. Eighteen mice underwent T2-weighted MRI and 18F FDG PET scans two times, before and after the administration of human immunoglobulin or antibody-based treatments. For training the CNN, manually traced brain masks and iSN-based target VOIs were used as the label. We compared our CNN-based VOIs with conventional (template-based) VOIs in terms of the correlation of standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) by both methods and two-sample t-tests of SUVR % changes in target VOIs before and after treatment. Our deep CNN-based method successfully generated brain parenchyma mask and target VOIs, which shows no significant difference from conventional VOI methods in SUVR correlation analysis, thus establishing methods of template-based VOI without SN.
Keywords: deep convolutional-neural-network (CNN); inverse-spatial-normalization (iSN); mouse brain; skull-stripping; template-based volume of interest (VOI).
Copyright © 2022 Seo, Kim, Oh, Chung, Kim, Oh, Joo and Kim.