Paper ID: 2112.06979

The Brain Tumor Sequence Registration (BraTS-Reg) Challenge: Establishing Correspondence Between Pre-Operative and Follow-up MRI Scans of Diffuse Glioma Patients

Bhakti Baheti, Satrajit Chakrabarty, Hamed Akbari, Michel Bilello, Benedikt Wiestler, Julian Schwarting, Evan Calabrese, Jeffrey Rudie, Syed Abidi, Mina Mousa, Javier Villanueva-Meyer, Brandon K. K. Fields, Florian Kofler, Russell Takeshi Shinohara, Juan Eugenio Iglesias, Tony C. W. Mok, Albert C. S. Chung, Marek Wodzinski, Artur Jurgas, Niccolo Marini, Manfredo Atzori, Henning Muller, Christoph Grobroehmer, Hanna Siebert, Lasse Hansen, Mattias P. Heinrich, Luca Canalini, Jan Klein, Annika Gerken, Stefan Heldmann, Alessa Hering, Horst K. Hahn, Mingyuan Meng, Lei Bi, Dagan Feng, Jinman Kim, Ramy A. Zeineldin, Mohamed E. Karar, Franziska Mathis-Ullrich, Oliver Burgert, Javid Abderezaei, Aymeric Pionteck, Agamdeep Chopra, Mehmet Kurt, Kewei Yan, Yonghong Yan, Zhe Tang, Jianqiang Ma, Sahar Almahfouz Nasser, Nikhil Cherian Kurian, Mohit Meena, Saqib Shamsi, Amit Sethi, Nicholas J. Tustison, Brian B. Avants, Philip Cook, James C. Gee, Lin Tian, Hastings Greer, Marc Niethammer, Andrew Hoopes, Malte Hoffmann, Adrian V. Dalca, Stergios Christodoulidis, Theo Estiene, Maria Vakalopoulou, Nikos Paragios, Daniel S. Marcus, Christos Davatzikos, Aristeidis Sotiras, Bjoern Menze, Spyridon Bakas, Diana Waldmannstetter

Registration of longitudinal brain MRI scans containing pathologies is challenging due to dramatic changes in tissue appearance. Although there has been progress in developing general-purpose medical image registration techniques, they have not yet attained the requisite precision and reliability for this task, highlighting its inherent complexity. Here we describe the Brain Tumor Sequence Registration (BraTS-Reg) challenge, as the first public benchmark environment for deformable registration algorithms focusing on estimating correspondences between pre-operative and follow-up scans of the same patient diagnosed with a diffuse brain glioma. The BraTS-Reg data comprise de-identified multi-institutional multi-parametric MRI (mpMRI) scans, curated for size and resolution according to a canonical anatomical template, and divided into training, validation, and testing sets. Clinical experts annotated ground truth (GT) landmark points of anatomical locations distinct across the temporal domain. Quantitative evaluation and ranking were based on the Median Euclidean Error (MEE), Robustness, and the determinant of the Jacobian of the displacement field. The top-ranked methodologies yielded similar performance across all evaluation metrics and shared several methodological commonalities, including pre-alignment, deep neural networks, inverse consistency analysis, and test-time instance optimization per-case basis as a post-processing step. The top-ranked method attained the MEE at or below that of the inter-rater variability for approximately 60% of the evaluated landmarks, underscoring the scope for further accuracy and robustness improvements, especially relative to human experts. The aim of BraTS-Reg is to continue to serve as an active resource for research, with the data and online evaluation tools accessible at https://bratsreg.github.io/.

Submitted: Dec 13, 2021