Abstract

BackgroundIdentifying the location and the volume of the prostate is important for ultrasound-guided prostate brachytherapy. Prostate volume is also important for prostate cancer diagnosis. Manual outlining of the prostate border is able to determine the prostate volume accurately, however, it is time consuming and tedious. Therefore, a number of investigations have been devoted to designing algorithms that are suitable for segmenting the prostate boundary in ultrasound images. The most popular method is the deformable model (snakes), a method that involves designing an energy function and then optimizing this function. The snakes algorithm usually requires either an initial contour or some points on the prostate boundary to be estimated close enough to the original boundary which is considered a drawback to this powerful method.MethodsThe proposed spectral clustering segmentation algorithm is built on a totally different foundation that doesn't involve any function design or optimization. It also doesn't need any contour or any points on the boundary to be estimated. The proposed algorithm depends mainly on graph theory techniques.ResultsSpectral clustering is used in this paper for both prostate gland segmentation from the background and internal gland segmentation. The obtained segmented images were compared to the expert radiologist segmented images. The proposed algorithm obtained excellent gland segmentation results with 93% average overlap areas. It is also able to internally segment the gland where the segmentation showed consistency with the cancerous regions identified by the expert radiologist.ConclusionThe proposed spectral clustering segmentation algorithm obtained fast excellent estimates that can give rough prostate volume and location as well as internal gland segmentation without any user interaction.

Highlights

  • Identifying the location and the volume of the prostate is important for ultrasoundguided prostate brachytherapy

  • There has been an increase in the reported prevalence of prostate cancer. This is believed to be due to increased prostate awareness, prostate specific antigen (PSA) screening, and imaging techniques such as TransRectal UltraSound (TRUS)

  • Some results that show the correlation between the desired segmentation and the eigenvectors of the affinity matrix corresponding to TRUS images already segmented by an expert radiologist

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Summary

Introduction

Identifying the location and the volume of the prostate is important for ultrasoundguided prostate brachytherapy. Prostate volume is important for prostate cancer diagnosis. A number of investigations have been devoted to designing algorithms that are suitable for segmenting the prostate boundary in ultrasound images. The snakes algorithm usually requires either an initial contour or some points on the prostate boundary to be estimated close enough to the original boundary which is considered a drawback to this powerful method. There has been an increase in the reported prevalence of prostate cancer. This is believed to be due to increased prostate awareness, prostate specific antigen (PSA) screening, and imaging techniques such as TransRectal UltraSound (TRUS). Prostate Cancer diagnosis is usually aided by using TRUS images.

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