Ischemic changes are not visible on non-contrast head CT until several hours after infarction, though deep convolutional neural networks have shown promise in the detection of subtle imaging findings. This study aims to assess if dual-energy CT (DECT) acquisition can improve early infarct visibility for machine learning. The retrospective dataset consisted of 330 DECTs acquired up to 48 h prior to confirmation of a DWI positive infarct on MRI between 2016 and 2022. Infarct segmentation maps were generated from the MRI and co-registered to the CT to serve as ground truth for segmentation. A self-configuring 3D nnU-Net was trained for segmentation on (1) standard 120 kV mixed-images (2) 190 keV virtual monochromatic images and (3) 120 kV + 190 keV images as dual channel inputs. Algorithm performance was assessed with Dice scores with paired t-tests on a test set. Global aggregate Dice scores were 0.616, 0.645, and 0.665 for standard 120 kV images, 190 keV, and combined channel inputs respectively. Differences in overall Dice scores were statistically significant with highest performance for combined channel inputs (p < 0.01). Small but statistically significant differences were observed for infarcts between 6 and 12 h from last-known-well with higher performance for larger infarcts. Volumetric accuracy trended higher with combined inputs but differences were not statistically significant (p = 0.07). Supplementation of standard head CT images with dual-energy data provides earlier and more accurate segmentation of infarcts for machine learning particularly between 6 and 12 h after last-known-well.
Keywords: Deep Learning; Dual Energy CT; MRI; NnU-Net; Segmentation; Stroke.
© 2024. The Author(s) under exclusive licence to Society for Imaging Informatics in Medicine.