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Comput Biol Med ; 177: 108628, 2024 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38810476

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: The metabolic syndrome induced by obesity is closely associated with cardiovascular disease, and the prevalence is increasing globally, year by year. Obesity is a risk marker for detecting this disease. However, current research on computer-aided detection of adipose distribution is hampered by the lack of open-source large abdominal adipose datasets. METHODS: In this study, a benchmark Abdominal Adipose Tissue CT Image Dataset (AATCT-IDS) containing 300 subjects is prepared and published. AATCT-IDS publics 13,732 raw CT slices, and the researchers individually annotate the subcutaneous and visceral adipose tissue regions of 3213 of those slices that have the same slice distance to validate denoising methods, train semantic segmentation models, and study radiomics. For different tasks, this paper compares and analyzes the performance of various methods on AATCT-IDS by combining the visualization results and evaluation data. Thus, verify the research potential of this data set in the above three types of tasks. RESULTS: In the comparative study of image denoising, algorithms using a smoothing strategy suppress mixed noise at the expense of image details and obtain better evaluation data. Methods such as BM3D preserve the original image structure better, although the evaluation data are slightly lower. The results show significant differences among them. In the comparative study of semantic segmentation of abdominal adipose tissue, the segmentation results of adipose tissue by each model show different structural characteristics. Among them, BiSeNet obtains segmentation results only slightly inferior to U-Net with the shortest training time and effectively separates small and isolated adipose tissue. In addition, the radiomics study based on AATCT-IDS reveals three adipose distributions in the subject population. CONCLUSION: AATCT-IDS contains the ground truth of adipose tissue regions in abdominal CT slices. This open-source dataset can attract researchers to explore the multi-dimensional characteristics of abdominal adipose tissue and thus help physicians and patients in clinical practice. AATCT-IDS is freely published for non-commercial purpose at: https://figshare.com/articles/dataset/AATTCT-IDS/23807256.


Subject(s)
Abdominal Fat , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Humans , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Abdominal Fat/diagnostic imaging , Male , Female , Databases, Factual , Algorithms , Radiomics
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