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Main Authors: Kubota, Yoshiki, Nagata, Yosuke, Tamura, Manabu, Hirata, Akimasa
Format: Preprint
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.14660
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author Kubota, Yoshiki
Nagata, Yosuke
Tamura, Manabu
Hirata, Akimasa
author_facet Kubota, Yoshiki
Nagata, Yosuke
Tamura, Manabu
Hirata, Akimasa
contents We propose a noninvasive and dispersive framework for estimating the spatially nonuniform conductivity of brain tumors using MR images. The method consists of two components: (i) voxel-wise assignment of tumor conductivity based on reference values fitted to the Cole-Cole model using empirical data from the literature and (ii) fine-tuning of a deep learning model pretrained on healthy participants. A total of 67 cases, comprising both healthy participants and tumor patients and including 9,806 paired T1- and T2-weighted MR images, were used for training and evaluation. The proposed method successfully estimated patient-specific conductivity maps, exhibiting smooth spatial variations that reflected tissue characteristics, such as edema, necrosis, and rim-associated intensity gradients observed in T1- and T2-weighted MR images. At 10 kHz, case-wise mean conductivity values varied across patients, ranging from 0.132 to 0.512 S/m in the rim (defined as the region within 2 mm of the tumor boundary), from 0.132 to 0.608 S/m in the core (the area inside the rim), and from 0.141 to 0.542 S/m in the entire tumor. Electromagnetic simulations for transcranial magnetic stimulation in individualized head models showed substantial differences in intratumoral field distributions between uniform assignments and the proposed nonuniform maps. Furthermore, this framework demonstrated voxel-wise dispersive mapping at 10 kHz, 1 MHz, and 100 MHz. This framework supports accurate whole-brain conductivity estimation by incorporating both individual anatomical structures and tumor-specific characteristics. Collectively, these results advance patient-specific EM modeling for tumor-bearing brains and lay the groundwork for subsequent microwave-band validation.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2509_14660
institution arXiv
publishDate 2025
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle A Noninvasive and Dispersive Framework for Estimating Nonuniform Conductivity of Brain Tumor in Patient-Specific Head Models
Kubota, Yoshiki
Nagata, Yosuke
Tamura, Manabu
Hirata, Akimasa
Medical Physics
We propose a noninvasive and dispersive framework for estimating the spatially nonuniform conductivity of brain tumors using MR images. The method consists of two components: (i) voxel-wise assignment of tumor conductivity based on reference values fitted to the Cole-Cole model using empirical data from the literature and (ii) fine-tuning of a deep learning model pretrained on healthy participants. A total of 67 cases, comprising both healthy participants and tumor patients and including 9,806 paired T1- and T2-weighted MR images, were used for training and evaluation. The proposed method successfully estimated patient-specific conductivity maps, exhibiting smooth spatial variations that reflected tissue characteristics, such as edema, necrosis, and rim-associated intensity gradients observed in T1- and T2-weighted MR images. At 10 kHz, case-wise mean conductivity values varied across patients, ranging from 0.132 to 0.512 S/m in the rim (defined as the region within 2 mm of the tumor boundary), from 0.132 to 0.608 S/m in the core (the area inside the rim), and from 0.141 to 0.542 S/m in the entire tumor. Electromagnetic simulations for transcranial magnetic stimulation in individualized head models showed substantial differences in intratumoral field distributions between uniform assignments and the proposed nonuniform maps. Furthermore, this framework demonstrated voxel-wise dispersive mapping at 10 kHz, 1 MHz, and 100 MHz. This framework supports accurate whole-brain conductivity estimation by incorporating both individual anatomical structures and tumor-specific characteristics. Collectively, these results advance patient-specific EM modeling for tumor-bearing brains and lay the groundwork for subsequent microwave-band validation.
title A Noninvasive and Dispersive Framework for Estimating Nonuniform Conductivity of Brain Tumor in Patient-Specific Head Models
topic Medical Physics
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2509.14660