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Research ArticleArtificial Intelligence

AI-Generated Synthetic STIR of the Lumbar Spine from T1 and T2 MRI Sequences Trained with Open-Source Algorithms

Alice M.L. Santilli, Mark A. Fontana, Erwin E. Xia, Zenas Igbinoba, Ek Tsoon Tan, Darryl B. Sneag and J. Levi Chazen
American Journal of Neuroradiology March 2025, 46 (3) 552-558; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A8512
Alice M.L. Santilli
aFrom the Orthopedic Data Innovation Lab (ODIL) (A.M.L.S., M.A.F.), Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York
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  • ORCID record for Alice M.L. Santilli
Mark A. Fontana
aFrom the Orthopedic Data Innovation Lab (ODIL) (A.M.L.S., M.A.F.), Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York
cDepartment of Population Health Sciences (M.A.F.), Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York
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Erwin E. Xia
bDepartment of Radiology and Imaging (E.E.X., Z.I., E.T.T., D.B.S., J.L.C.), Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York
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Zenas Igbinoba
bDepartment of Radiology and Imaging (E.E.X., Z.I., E.T.T., D.B.S., J.L.C.), Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York
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Ek Tsoon Tan
bDepartment of Radiology and Imaging (E.E.X., Z.I., E.T.T., D.B.S., J.L.C.), Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York
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Darryl B. Sneag
bDepartment of Radiology and Imaging (E.E.X., Z.I., E.T.T., D.B.S., J.L.C.), Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York
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J. Levi Chazen
bDepartment of Radiology and Imaging (E.E.X., Z.I., E.T.T., D.B.S., J.L.C.), Hospital for Special Surgery, New York, New York
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Lumbar spine MRIs can be time consuming, stressful for patients, and costly to acquire. In this work, we train and evaluate open-source generative adversarial network (GAN) to create synthetic lumbar spine MRI STIR volumes from T1 and T2 sequences, providing a proof-of-concept that could allow for faster MRI examinations.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 1817 MRI examinations with sagittal T1, T2, and STIR sequences were accumulated and randomly divided into training, validation, and test sets. A GAN was trained to create synthetic STIR volumes by using the T1 and T2 volumes as inputs, optimized with the validation set, and then applied to the test set. Acquired and synthetic test set volumes were independently evaluated in a blinded, randomized fashion by 3 radiologists specializing in musculoskeletal imaging and neuroradiology. Readers assessed image quality, motion artifacts, perceived likelihood of the volume being acquired or synthetic, and the presence of 7 pathologies.

RESULTS: The optimal model leveraged a customized loss function that accentuated foreground pixels, achieving a structural similarity imaging metric of 0.842, mean absolute error of 0.028, and peak signal-to-noise ratio of 26.367. Radiologists could distinguish synthetic from acquired volumes; however, the synthetic volumes were of equal or better quality in 77% of test patients and demonstrated equivalent or decreased motion artifacts in 78% of test patients. For common pathologies, the synthetic volumes had high positive predictive value (75%-100%) but lower sensitivity (0%–67%).

CONCLUSIONS: This work links objective computer vision performance metrics and subject clinical evaluation of synthetic spine MRIs by using open-source and reproducible methodologies. High-quality synthetic volumes are generated, reproducing many important pathologies and demonstrating a potential means for expediting imaging protocols.

ABBREVIATIONS:

AI
artificial intelligence
aqSTIR
acquired STIR volume
GAN
general adversarial network
MAE
mean absolute error
NPV
negative predictive value
PPV
positive predictive value
PSNR
peak signal-to-noise ratio
SSIM
structural similarity index measure
sSTIR
synthetically generated STIR volume
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American Journal of Neuroradiology: 46 (3)
American Journal of Neuroradiology
Vol. 46, Issue 3
1 Mar 2025
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Cite this article
Alice M.L. Santilli, Mark A. Fontana, Erwin E. Xia, Zenas Igbinoba, Ek Tsoon Tan, Darryl B. Sneag, J. Levi Chazen
AI-Generated Synthetic STIR of the Lumbar Spine from T1 and T2 MRI Sequences Trained with Open-Source Algorithms
American Journal of Neuroradiology Mar 2025, 46 (3) 552-558; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A8512

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AI-Synthesized Lumbar Spine STIR from T1 and T2
Alice M.L. Santilli, Mark A. Fontana, Erwin E. Xia, Zenas Igbinoba, Ek Tsoon Tan, Darryl B. Sneag, J. Levi Chazen
American Journal of Neuroradiology Mar 2025, 46 (3) 552-558; DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A8512
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