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Autori principali: Markale, Ameya, Brock, Luise, Horishnyi, Ihor, Skwierawska, Dominika, Nguyen, Tri-Thien, Schreiter, Hannes, Heidarikahkesh, Shirin, Kapsner, Lorenz A., Uder, Michael, Ohlmeyer, Sabine, Laun, Frederik B, Liebert, Andrzej, Bickelhaupt, Sebastian
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03941
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author Markale, Ameya
Brock, Luise
Horishnyi, Ihor
Skwierawska, Dominika
Nguyen, Tri-Thien
Schreiter, Hannes
Heidarikahkesh, Shirin
Kapsner, Lorenz A.
Uder, Michael
Ohlmeyer, Sabine
Laun, Frederik B
Liebert, Andrzej
Bickelhaupt, Sebastian
author_facet Markale, Ameya
Brock, Luise
Horishnyi, Ihor
Skwierawska, Dominika
Nguyen, Tri-Thien
Schreiter, Hannes
Heidarikahkesh, Shirin
Kapsner, Lorenz A.
Uder, Michael
Ohlmeyer, Sabine
Laun, Frederik B
Liebert, Andrzej
Bickelhaupt, Sebastian
contents Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) can support lesion detection and characterization in breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), however especially high b-value diffusion-weighted acquisitions can be prone to intensity artifacts that can affect diagnostic image assessment. This study aims to detect both hyper- and hypointense artifacts on high b-value diffusion-weighted images (b=1500 s/mm2) using deep learning, employing either a binary classification (artifact presence) or a multiclass classification (artifact intensity) approach on a slice-wise dataset.This IRB-approved retrospective study used the single-center dataset comprising n=11806 slices from routine 3T breast MRI examinations performed between 2022 and mid-2023. Three convolutional neural network (CNN) architectures (DenseNet121, ResNet18, and SEResNet50) were trained for binary classification of hyper- and hypointense artifacts. The best performing model (DenseNet121) was applied to an independent holdout test set and was further trained separately for multiclass classification. Evaluation included area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC), area under precision recall curve (AUPRC), precision, and recall, as well as analysis of predicted bounding box positions, derived from the network Grad-CAM heatmaps. DenseNet121 achieved AUROCs of 0.92 and 0.94 for hyper- and hypointense artifact detection, respectively, and weighted AUROCs of 0.85 and 0.88 for multiclass classification on single-slice high b-value diffusion-weighted images. A radiologist evaluated bounding box precision on a 1-5 Likert-like scale across 200 slices, achieving mean scores of 3.33+-1.04 for hyperintense artifacts and 2.62+-0.81 for hypointense artifacts. Hyper- and hypointense artifact detection in slice-wise breast DWI MRI dataset (b=1500 s/mm2) using CNNs particularly DenseNet121, seems promising and requires further validation.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_03941
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Slice-wise quality assessment of high b-value breast DWI via deep learning-based artifact detection
Markale, Ameya
Brock, Luise
Horishnyi, Ihor
Skwierawska, Dominika
Nguyen, Tri-Thien
Schreiter, Hannes
Heidarikahkesh, Shirin
Kapsner, Lorenz A.
Uder, Michael
Ohlmeyer, Sabine
Laun, Frederik B
Liebert, Andrzej
Bickelhaupt, Sebastian
Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) can support lesion detection and characterization in breast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), however especially high b-value diffusion-weighted acquisitions can be prone to intensity artifacts that can affect diagnostic image assessment. This study aims to detect both hyper- and hypointense artifacts on high b-value diffusion-weighted images (b=1500 s/mm2) using deep learning, employing either a binary classification (artifact presence) or a multiclass classification (artifact intensity) approach on a slice-wise dataset.This IRB-approved retrospective study used the single-center dataset comprising n=11806 slices from routine 3T breast MRI examinations performed between 2022 and mid-2023. Three convolutional neural network (CNN) architectures (DenseNet121, ResNet18, and SEResNet50) were trained for binary classification of hyper- and hypointense artifacts. The best performing model (DenseNet121) was applied to an independent holdout test set and was further trained separately for multiclass classification. Evaluation included area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUROC), area under precision recall curve (AUPRC), precision, and recall, as well as analysis of predicted bounding box positions, derived from the network Grad-CAM heatmaps. DenseNet121 achieved AUROCs of 0.92 and 0.94 for hyper- and hypointense artifact detection, respectively, and weighted AUROCs of 0.85 and 0.88 for multiclass classification on single-slice high b-value diffusion-weighted images. A radiologist evaluated bounding box precision on a 1-5 Likert-like scale across 200 slices, achieving mean scores of 3.33+-1.04 for hyperintense artifacts and 2.62+-0.81 for hypointense artifacts. Hyper- and hypointense artifact detection in slice-wise breast DWI MRI dataset (b=1500 s/mm2) using CNNs particularly DenseNet121, seems promising and requires further validation.
title Slice-wise quality assessment of high b-value breast DWI via deep learning-based artifact detection
topic Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.03941