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CMRxRecon 2023

About

Welcome to the Cardiac MRI Reconstruction Challenge 2023 (CMRxRecon2023)!
The CMRxRecon Challenge is a part of the 26th International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer Assisted Intervention, MICCAI 2023, which will be held from October 8th to 12nd 2023 in Vancouver Convention Centre Canada.

Website | Dataset | GitHub | Publications

Motivation

This challenge aims to establish a platform for fast CMR image reconstruction and provide a benchmark dataset that enables the broad research community to promote advances in this area of research.

Background

Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) has become an important imaging modality for diagnosing cardiac disease due to its superior soft tissue contrast and non-invasiveness. However, an inherent drawback of MRI is that the imaging speed is particularly slow, which will cause discomfort to patients and intr​oduce motion artifacts into images. CMR image reconstruction from highly under-sampled k-space (raw data) has become a hot topic in recent years. So far, a large number of AI-based image reconstruction algorithms have shown the potential to improve imaging performance through highly under-sampling data. However, the field of CMR reconstruction still lacks public, standardized, and high-quality datasets. To date, NYU Langone Health has released 'fastMRI' dataset, containing multi-channel knee and brain MRI raw data. However, these images are inadequate for 3D+1D (time domain) applications in cardiac imaging. The goal of establishing the 'CMRxRecon' dataset is to provide a platform that enables the broad research community to participate in this important work.

This repository contains Matlab code for data loaders, subsampling functions, evaluation metrics, and reference implementations of simple baseline methods. It also contains implementations for methods in some of the publications of the CMRxRecon project.

Challenge tasks

The ‘CMRxRecon’ challenge include two tasks:

  1. Cine reconstruction

The aim of task 1 is to reduce the readouts and address the image degradation due to motions caused by voluntary breath-holds or cardiac arrhythmia. The final goal will be real-time cine imaging.

Task 2 2) T1/T2 mapping

The aim of task 2 is to improve the T1 and T2 mapping estimation accuracy by reducing the readouts and address the image degradation due to motions and under-sampled reconstructions.

Task 1

Documentation

The CMRxRecon Dataset

A total of 300 healthy volunteers from a single center were included in this study. The released dataset include 120 training data, 60 validation data and 120 test data. Training data include fully sampled k-space data, auto-calibration lines (ACS, 24 lines) and reconstructed images in .m format will be provided. Validation data include under-sampled k-space data with acceleration factors of 4, 8 and 10, sampling mask, and auto-calibration lines (ACS, 24 lines) will be provided. We will withhold the ground truth images of the validation set. Test data include under-sampled k-space data with acceleration factors of 4, 8 and 10, sampling mask, auto-calibration lines (ACS, 24 lines) and reconstructed images. The test data will not be available to the participants.

Image

Package Structure

Contact

The code is provided to support reproducible research. If the code is giving syntax error in your particular configuration or some files are missing then you may open an issue or email us at CMRxRecon@outlook.com

Publication references

You are free to use and/or refer to the CMRxRecon challenge and datasets in your own research after the embargo period (Dec 2023), provided that you cite the following manuscripts:

**Reference of the CMR imaging acquisition protocol: **

  1. Wang C, Lyu J, Wang S, et al. CMRxRecon: A publicly available k-space dataset and benchmark to advance deep learning for cardiac MRI. Scientific Data, 2024, 11(1): 687.
  2. Wang C, Lyu J, Wang S, et al. CMRxRecon: An open cardiac MRI dataset for the competition of accelerated image reconstruction. arXiv preprint arXiv:2309.10836, 2023.
  3. Wang Z, Wang F, Qin C, et al. CMRxRecon2024: A Multi-Modality, Multi-View K-Space Dataset Boosting Universal Machine Learning for Accelerated Cardiac MRI. arXiv preprint arXiv:2406.19043, 2024.
  4. Lyu J, Qin C, Wang S, et al. The state-of-the-art in Cardiac MRI Reconstruction: Results of the CMRxRecon Challenge in MICCAI 2023. arXiv preprint arXiv:2404.01082, 2023.
  5. Wang C, Li Y, Lv J, et al. Recommendation for Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging-Based Phenotypic Study: Imaging Part. Phenomics. 2021, 1(4): 151-170.
  6. Wang S, Qin C, Wang C, et al. The Extreme Cardiac MRI Analysis Challenge under Respiratory Motion (CMRxMotion). arXiv preprint arXiv:2210.06385, 2022.

**Reference for previously developed reconstruction algorithms: **

  1. Wang C, Jang J, Neisius U, et al. Black blood myocardial T2 mapping. Magnetic resonance in medicine. 2019, 81(1): 153-166.
  2. Lyu J, Wang S, Tian Y, Zou J, Dong S, Wang C, Aviles-Rivero AI, Qin J. STADNet: Spatial-Temporal Attention-Guided Dual-Path Network for cardiac cine MRI super-resolution. Medical Image Analysis, 2024;94:103142.
  3. Lyu J, Li G, Wang C, et al. Region-focused multi-view transformer-based generative adversarial network for cardiac cine MRI reconstruction. Medical Image Analysis, 2023: 102760.
  4. Lyu J, Tian Y, Cai Q, Wang C*, Qin J. Adaptive channel-modulated personalized federated learning for magnetic resonance image reconstruction. Computers in Biology and Medicine, 2023, 165: 107330.
  5. Qin C, Schlemper J, Caballero J, et al. Convolutional recurrent neural networks for dynamic MR image reconstruction. IEEE transactions on medical imaging, 2018, 38(1): 280-290.
  6. Qin C, Duan J, Hammernik K, et al. Complementary time-frequency domain networks for dynamic parallel MR image reconstruction. Magnetic Resonance in Medicine, 2021, 86(6): 3274-3291.
  7. Lyu J, Tian Y, Cai Q, et al. Adaptive channel-modulated personalized federated learning for magnetic resonance image reconstruction. Computers in Biology and Medicine, 2023, 165: 107330.
  8. Lyu J, Tong X, Wang C. Parallel Imaging With a Combination of SENSE and Generative Adversarial Networks (GAN). Quantitative Imaging in Medicine and Surgery. 2020, 10(12): 2260-2273.
  9. Lyu J, Sui B, Wang C, et al. DuDoCAF: Dual-Domain Cross-Attention Fusion with Recurrent Transformer for Fast Multi-contrast MR Imaging. International Conference on Medical Image Computing and Computer-Assisted Intervention. Springer, Cham, 2022: 474-484.
  10. Ouyang C, Schlemper K, et al. Generalizing Deep Learning MRI Reconstruction across Different Domains, arXiv preprint arXiv: 1902.10815, 2019.
  11. Shangqi Gao, Hangqi Zhou, Yibo Gao, Xiahai Zhuang. BayeSeg: Bayesian Modeling for Medical Image Segmentation with Interpretable Generalizability. Medical Image Analysis Volume 89, 102889, 2023 (Elsevier-MedIA 1st Prize & MICCAl Best Paper Award 2023)