Home

Awesome

Welcome to the Massive Chest X-ray Dataset (MaCheX)

What is MaCheX?

MaCheX is a composition of mutliple public chest radiography datasets. In this version it contains:

All in all, the full final dataset amounts to around 930,000 chest x-rays in 1024x1024px resolution. This number includes frontal and lateral scans. If you wish to use frontal scans only, the collection of lateral scans can be turned off in the config.yml. The frontal-only dataset is approximately 680,000 chest X-rays strong. The dataset contains encoded images and partly labels and text-reports.

How can I compose MaCheX?

MaCheX is a collection of public datasets and unifies them under a common interface, but that does not imply that we have the license to host this data ourselves. For downloading the raw datasets please follow the below URLs:

Please unpack the downloaded files and adjust the paths in the config.yml file accordingly. NUM_WORKERS specifies the number of parallel processes for preprocessing. Ideally this should correspond to the number of your available CPU-cores. MACHEX_PATH is the directory, where MaCheX will be saved. If it is desired to only collect frontal scans, set FRONTAL_ONLY to true.

At this point we would like to mention and appreciate the TorchXRayVision project, which also targets to provide an interface to chest X-ray datasets. The download links for RSNA, OpenI, SIIM-ACR and ObjectCXR were obtained from their packages' documentation. Check them out as well!

For the pre-processing the installation of a few packages may be necessary, which is preferably done in a virtual environment:

python -m venv .venv
source .venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt

Now, the machex script can be called to trigger preprocessing:

python machex.py -c <path/to/config.yml>

The -c option points to config.yml per default and does not need to be supplied in this case.

The preprocessing is fully modular, i.e. one can run it for a subset or single datasets explicitly. This can easily be done by setting the path to the respective datasset to null in the config file, e.g. if one does not want to include MIMIC in the preprocessing setup, the correct formulation must be MIMIC_ROOT: null.

What is the structure of MaCheX?

The resulting structure is organized on a per-dataset basis. MACHEX_PATH will contain one directory for each dataset. In each of these directories an index.json file resides, which is structured as:

{
  "000000": {
    "path": "<absolute/path/to/processed/img>",
    "key": "<key_for_identifying_img_in_orig_dataset>"
  },
  "000001": {
    "path": "<absolute/path/to/processed/img>",
    "key": "<key_for_identifying_img_in_orig_dataset>"
  },
  ...
}

For MIMIC the index file will contain another entry report. A class_label key is contained in MIMIC and CheXpert. The images are allocate in subdirectories with a maximum count of 10,000 images in each.

How can I access MaCheX?

dataset.py contains an exemplary implementation of a PyTorch Dataset for MaCheX. Essentially, each sub-dataset is independent of the other, but has a common interface over the respective index.json. Thus, one can load a specific subset over the ChestXrayDataset object or the full MaCheX dataset with MaCheXDataset by providing correct directory paths.

Citation

If you use the MaChex collection or code in your research, please cite our paper Cascaded Latent Diffusion Models for High-Resolution Chest X-ray Synthesis:

@inproceedings{weber2023cascaded,
  title={Cascaded Latent Diffusion Models for High-Resolution Chest X-ray Synthesis},
  author={Weber, Tobias and Ingrisch, Michael and Bischl, Bernd and R{\"u}gamer, David},
  booktitle={Advances in Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining: 27th Pacific-Asia Conference, PAKDD 2023},
  year={2023},
  organization={Springer}
}