Overview of the Head and Neck Tumor Segmentation for Magnetic Resonance Guided Applications (HNTS-MRG) 2024 Challenge

Magnetic resonance (MR)-guided radiation therapy (RT) is enhancing head and neck cancer (HNC) treatment through superior soft tissue contrast and longitudinal imaging capabilities. However, manual tumor segmentation remains a significant challenge, spurring interest in artificial intelligence (AI)-d...

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Veröffentlicht in:ArXiv.org 2024-11
Hauptverfasser: Wahid, Kareem A, Dede, Cem, El-Habashy, Dina M, Kamel, Serageldin, Rooney, Michael K, Khamis, Yomna, Abdelaal, Moamen R A, Ahmed, Sara, Corrigan, Kelsey L, Chang, Enoch, Dudzinski, Stephanie O, Salzillo, Travis C, McDonald, Brigid A, Mulder, Samuel L, McCullum, Lucas, Alakayleh, Qusai, Sjogreen, Carlos, He, Renjie, Mohamed, Abdallah S R, Lai, Stephen Y, Christodouleas, John P, Schaefer, Andrew J, Naser, Mohamed A, Fuller, Clifton D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Magnetic resonance (MR)-guided radiation therapy (RT) is enhancing head and neck cancer (HNC) treatment through superior soft tissue contrast and longitudinal imaging capabilities. However, manual tumor segmentation remains a significant challenge, spurring interest in artificial intelligence (AI)-driven automation. To accelerate innovation in this field, we present the Head and Neck Tumor Segmentation for MR-Guided Applications (HNTS-MRG) 2024 Challenge, a satellite event of the 27th International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention. This challenge addresses the scarcity of large, publicly available AI-ready adaptive RT datasets in HNC and explores the potential of incorporating multi-timepoint data to enhance RT auto-segmentation performance. Participants tackled two HNC segmentation tasks: automatic delineation of primary gross tumor volume (GTVp) and gross metastatic regional lymph nodes (GTVn) on pre-RT (Task 1) and mid-RT (Task 2) T2-weighted scans. The challenge provided 150 HNC cases for training and 50 for testing, hosted on grand-challenge.org using a Docker submission framework. In total, 19 independent teams from across the world qualified by submitting both their algorithms and corresponding papers, resulting in 18 submissions for Task 1 and 15 submissions for Task 2. Evaluation using the mean aggregated Dice Similarity Coefficient showed top-performing AI methods achieved scores of 0.825 in Task 1 and 0.733 in Task 2. These results surpassed clinician interobserver variability benchmarks, marking significant strides in automated tumor segmentation for MR-guided RT applications in HNC.
ISSN:2331-8422
2331-8422