CycleGAN denoising of extreme low-dose cardiac CT using wavelet-assisted noise disentanglement

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In electrocardiography (ECG) gated cardiac CT angiography (CCTA), multiple images covering the entire cardiac cycle are taken continuously, so reduction of the accumulated radiation dose could be an im-portant issue for patient safety. Although ECG-gated dose modulation (so-called ECG pulsing) is used to acquire many phases of CT images at a low dose, the reduction of the radiation dose introduces noise into the image reconstruction. To address this, we developed a high performance unsupervised deep learning method using noise disentanglement that can effectively learn the noise patterns even from extreme low dose CT images. For noise disentanglement, we use a wavelet transform to extract the high-frequency sig-nals that contain the most noise. Since matched low-dose and high-dose cardiac CT data are impossible to obtain in practice, our neural network was trained in an unsupervised manner using cycleGAN for the extracted high frequency signals from the low-dose and unpaired high-dose CT images. Once the network is trained, denoised images are obtained by subtracting the estimated noise components from the input images. Image quality evaluation of the denoised images from only 4% dose CT images was performed by experienced radiologists for several anatomical structures. Visual grading analysis was conducted accord-ing to the sharpness level, noise level, and structural visibility. Also, the signal-to-noise ratio was calcu-lated. The evaluation results showed that the quality of the images produced by the proposed method is much improved compared to low-dose CT images and to the baseline cycleGAN results. The proposed noise-disentangled cycleGAN with wavelet transform effectively removed noise from extreme low-dose CT images compared to the existing baseline algorithms. It can be an important denoising platform for low-dose CT. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Publisher
ELSEVIER
Issue Date
2021-12
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Citation

MEDICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS, v.74

ISSN
1361-8415
DOI
10.1016/j.media.2021.102209
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/288218
Appears in Collection
AI-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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