[HTML][HTML] Fast parallel image registration on CPU and GPU for diagnostic classification of Alzheimer's disease

DP Shamonin, EE Bron, BPF Lelieveldt… - Frontiers in …, 2014 - frontiersin.org
Frontiers in neuroinformatics, 2014frontiersin.org
Nonrigid image registration is an important, but time-consuming task in medical image
analysis. In typical neuroimaging studies, multiple image registrations are performed, ie, for
atlas-based segmentation or template construction. Faster image registration routines would
therefore be beneficial. In this paper we explore acceleration of the image registration
package elastix by a combination of several techniques:(i) parallelization on the CPU, to
speed up the cost function derivative calculation;(ii) parallelization on the GPU building on …
Nonrigid image registration is an important, but time-consuming task in medical image analysis. In typical neuroimaging studies, multiple image registrations are performed, i.e., for atlas-based segmentation or template construction. Faster image registration routines would therefore be beneficial. In this paper we explore acceleration of the image registration package elastix by a combination of several techniques: (i) parallelization on the CPU, to speed up the cost function derivative calculation; (ii) parallelization on the GPU building on and extending the OpenCL framework from ITKv4, to speed up the Gaussian pyramid computation and the image resampling step; (iii) exploitation of certain properties of the B-spline transformation model; (iv) further software optimizations. The accelerated registration tool is employed in a study on diagnostic classification of Alzheimer's disease and cognitively normal controls based on T1-weighted MRI. We selected 299 participants from the publicly available Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative database. Classification is performed with a support vector machine based on gray matter volumes as a marker for atrophy. We evaluated two types of strategies (voxel-wise and region-wise) that heavily rely on nonrigid image registration. Parallelization and optimization resulted in an acceleration factor of 4–5x on an 8-core machine. Using OpenCL a speedup factor of 2 was realized for computation of the Gaussian pyramids, and 15–60 for the resampling step, for larger images. The voxel-wise and the region-wise classification methods had an area under the receiver operator characteristic curve of 88 and 90%, respectively, both for standard and accelerated registration. We conclude that the image registration package elastix was substantially accelerated, with nearly identical results to the non-optimized version. The new functionality will become available in the next release of elastix as open source under the BSD license.
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