LOTUS: Learning to Optimize Task-based US representations

Anatomical segmentation of organs in ultrasound images is essential to many clinical applications, particularly for diagnosis and monitoring. Existing deep neural networks require a large amount of labeled data for training in order to achieve clinically acceptable performance. Yet, in ultrasound, due to characteristic properties such as speckle and clutter, it is challenging to obtain accurate segmentation boundaries, and precise pixel-wise labeling of images is highly dependent on the expertise of physicians. In contrast, CT scans have higher resolution and improved contrast, easing organ identification. In this paper, we propose a novel approach for learning to optimize task-based ultra-sound image representations. Given annotated CT segmentation maps as a simulation medium, we model acoustic propagation through tissue via ray-casting to generate ultrasound training data. Our ultrasound simulator is fully differentiable and learns to optimize the parameters for generating physics-based ultrasound images guided by the downstream segmentation task. In addition, we train an image adaptation network between real and simulated images to achieve simultaneous image synthesis and automatic segmentation on US images in an end-to-end training setting. The proposed method is evaluated on aorta and vessel segmentation tasks and shows promising quantitative results. Furthermore, we also conduct qualitative results of optimized image representations on other organs.

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