B. Menze
Publications
Sparse Representation Learning for Vessels
Analyzing human vasculature and vessel-like, tubular structures, such as airways, is crucial for disease diagnosis and treatment. Current methods often rely on small sub-regions or simplified tree-like structures, rendering analysis of entire organ-level networks at clinical resolution computationally challenging. To this end, we propose VAEsselSparse, an efficient encoder-decoder model to obtain a meaningful yet compact representation of the entire organ-level vascular network at sub-millimeter resolution. VAEsselSparse leverages the inherent sparsity of 3D vascular structures via sparse convolutions and attention mechanisms, achieving substantial spatial compression rates of 8 x 8 x 8. We demonstrate superior reconstruction performance compared to dense counterparts and previous methods. Importantly, the resulting latent space retains clinically relevant discriminative features readily usable for classification tasks, such as aneurysm/stenosis or subvariants of the circle of Willis. Moreover, the compact latent space of VAEsselSparse serves as an effective representation for learning vessel-specific priors through generative models, enabling the synthesis of realistic vasculature.
RadAgent: A tool-using AI agent for stepwise interpretation of chest computed tomography
Vision-language models (VLM) have markedly advanced AI-driven interpretation and reporting of complex medical imaging, such as computed tomography (CT). Yet, existing methods largely relegate clinicians to passive observers of final outputs, offering no interpretable reasoning trace for them to inspect, validate, or refine. To address this, we introduce RadAgent, a tool-using AI agent that generates CT reports through a stepwise and interpretable process. Each resulting report is accompanied by a fully inspectable trace of intermediate decisions and tool interactions, allowing clinicians to examine how the reported findings are derived. In our experiments, we observe that RadAgent improves Chest CT report generation over its 3D VLM counterpart, CT-Chat, across three dimensions. Clinical accuracy improves by 6.0 points (36.4% relative) in macro-F1 and 5.4 points (19.6% relative) in micro-F1. Robustness under adversarial conditions improves by 24.7 points (41.9% relative). Furthermore, RadAgent achieves 37.0% in faithfulness, a new capability entirely absent in its 3D VLM counterpart. By structuring the interpretation of chest CT as an explicit, tool-augmented and iterative reasoning trace, RadAgent brings us closer toward transparent and reliable AI for radiology.