2024
Autores
Freitas, N; Montenegro, H; Cardoso, MJ; Cardoso, JS;
Publicação
IEEE INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM ON BIOMEDICAL IMAGING, ISBI 2024
Abstract
Breast cancer locoregional treatment causes alterations to the physical aspect of the breast, often negatively impacting the self-esteem of patients unaware of the possible aesthetic outcomes of those treatments. To improve patients' self-esteem and enable a more informed choice of treatment when multiple options are available, the possibility to predict how the patient might look like after surgery would be of invaluable help. However, no work has been proposed to predict the aesthetic outcomes of breast cancer treatment. As a first step, we compare traditional computer vision and deep learning approaches to reproduce asymmetries of post-operative patients on pre-operative breast images. The results suggest that the traditional approach is better at altering the contour of the breast. In contrast, the deep learning approach succeeds in realistically altering the position and direction of the nipple.
2024
Autores
Eduard-Alexandru Bonci; Orit Kaidar-Person; Marília Antunes; Oriana Ciani; Helena Cruz; Rosa Di Micco; Oreste Davide Gentilini; Nicole Rotmensz; Pedro Gouveia; Jörg Heil; Pawel Kabata; Nuno Freitas; Tiago Gonçalves; Miguel Romariz; Helena Montenegro; Hélder P. Oliveira; Jaime S. Cardoso; Henrique Martins; Daniela Lopes; Marta Martinho; Ludovica Borsoi; Elisabetta Listorti; Carlos Mavioso; Martin Mika; André Pfob; Timo Schinköthe; Giovani Silva; Maria-Joao Cardoso;
Publicação
Cancer Research
Abstract
2025
Autores
Montenegro, H; Cardoso, MJ; Cardoso, JS;
Publicação
COMPUTER VISION-ECCV 2024 WORKSHOPS, PT IX
Abstract
Breast cancer locoregional treatment can cause significant and long-lasting alterations to a patient's body. As various surgical options may be available to a patient and considering the impact that the aesthetic outcome may have on the patient's self-esteem, it is critical for the patient to be adequately informed of the possible outcomes of each treatment when deciding on the treatment plan. With the purpose of simulating how a patient may look like after treatment, we propose a deep generative model to transfer asymmetries caused by treatment from post-operative breast patients into pre-operative images, taking advantage of the inherent symmetry of breast images. Furthermore, we disentangle asymmetries related with the breast shape from the nipple within the latent space of the network, enabling higher control over the alterations to the breasts. Finally, we show the proposed model's wide applicability in medical imaging, by applying it to generate counterfactual explanations for cardiomegaly and pleural effusion prediction in chest radiographs.
2025
Autores
Montenegro, H; Cardoso, JS;
Publicação
IEEE OPEN JOURNAL OF SIGNAL PROCESSING
Abstract
With the growing adoption of Deep Learning for imaging tasks in biometrics and healthcare, it becomes increasingly important to ensure privacy when using and sharing images of people. Several works enable privacy-preserving image sharing by anonymizing the images so that the corresponding individuals are no longer recognizable. Most works average images or their embeddings as an anonymization technique, relying on the assumption that the average operation is irreversible. Recently, cold diffusion models, based on the popular denoising diffusion probabilistic models, have succeeded in reversing deterministic transformations on images. In this work, we leverage cold diffusion to decompose superimposed images, empirically demonstrating that it is possible to obtain two or more identically-distributed images given their average. We propose novel sampling strategies for this task and show their efficacy on three datasets. Our findings highlight the risks of averaging images as an anonymization technique and argue for the use of alternative anonymization strategies.
2025
Autores
Santos, J; Montenegro, H; Bonci, E; Cardoso, MJ; Cardoso, JS;
Publicação
Artificial Intelligence and Imaging for Diagnostic and Treatment Challenges in Breast Care - Second Deep Breast Workshop, Deep-Breath 2025, Held in Conjunction with MICCAI 2025, Daejeon, South Korea, September 23, 2025, Proceedings
Abstract
Breast cancer patients often face difficulties when choosing among diverse surgeries. To aid patients, this paper proposes ACID-GAN (Anatomically and Clinically Informed Deep Generative Adversarial Network), a conditional generative model for predicting post-operative breast cancer outcomes using deep learning. Built on Pix2Pix, the model incorporates clinical metadata, such as surgery type and cancer laterality, by introducing a dedicated encoder for semantic supervision. Further improvements include colour preservation and anatomically informed losses, as well as clinical supervision via segmentation and classification modules. Experiments on a private dataset demonstrate that the model produces realistic, context-aware predictions. The results demonstrate that the model presents a meaningful trade-off between generating precise, anatomically defined results and maintaining patient-specific appearance, such as skin tone and shape. © 2025 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
2025
Autores
Teixeira, LF; Montenegro, H; Bonci, E; Cardoso, MJ; Cardoso, JS;
Publicação
Artificial Intelligence and Imaging for Diagnostic and Treatment Challenges in Breast Care - Second Deep Breast Workshop, Deep-Breath 2025, Held in Conjunction with MICCAI 2025, Daejeon, South Korea, September 23, 2025, Proceedings
Abstract
Breast cancer locoregional treatment includes a wide variety of procedures with diverse aesthetic outcomes. The aesthetic assessment of such procedures is typically subjective, hindering the fair comparison between their outcomes, and consequently restricting evidence-based improvements. Most objective evaluation tools were developed for conservative surgery, focusing on asymmetries while ignoring other relevant traits. To overcome these limitations, we propose SiameseOrdinalCLIP, an ordinal classification network based on image-text matching and pairwise ranking optimisation for the aesthetic evaluation of breast cancer treatment. Furthermore, we integrate a concept bottleneck module into the network for increased explainability. Experiments on a private dataset show that the proposed model surpasses the state-of-the-art aesthetic evaluation and ordinal classification networks. © 2025 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
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