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Temporally aware volumetric generative adversarial network‐based MR image reconstruction with simultaneous respiratory motion compensation: Initial feasibility in 3D dynamic cine cardiac MRI

Published Web Location

https://doi.org/10.1002/mrm.28912
Abstract

Purpose

Develop a novel three-dimensional (3D) generative adversarial network (GAN)-based technique for simultaneous image reconstruction and respiratory motion compensation of 4D MRI. Our goal was to enable high-acceleration factors 10.7X-15.8X, while maintaining robust and diagnostic image quality superior to state-of-the-art self-gating (SG) compressed sensing wavelet (CS-WV) reconstruction at lower acceleration factors 3.5X-7.9X.

Methods

Our GAN was trained based on pixel-wise content loss functions, adversarial loss function, and a novel data-driven temporal aware loss function to maintain anatomical accuracy and temporal coherence. Besides image reconstruction, our network also performs respiratory motion compensation for free-breathing scans. A novel progressive growing-based strategy was adapted to make the training process possible for the proposed GAN-based structure. The proposed method was developed and thoroughly evaluated qualitatively and quantitatively based on 3D cardiac cine data from 42 patients.

Results

Our proposed method achieved significantly better scores in general image quality and image artifacts at 10.7X-15.8X acceleration than the SG CS-WV approach at 3.5X-7.9X acceleration (4.53 ± 0.540 vs. 3.13 ± 0.681 for general image quality, 4.12 ± 0.429 vs. 2.97 ± 0.434 for image artifacts, P < .05 for both). No spurious anatomical structures were observed in our images. The proposed method enabled similar cardiac-function quantification as conventional SG CS-WV. The proposed method achieved faster central processing unit-based image reconstruction (6 s/cardiac phase) than the SG CS-WV (312 s/cardiac phase).

Conclusion

The proposed method showed promising potential for high-resolution (1 mm3 ) free-breathing 4D MR data acquisition with simultaneous respiratory motion compensation and fast reconstruction time.

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