TotalRegistrator: Towards a Lightweight Foundation Model for CT Image Registration
Xuan Loc Pham, Gwendolyn Vuurberg, Marjan Doppen, Joey Roosen, Tip Stille, Thi Quynh Ha, Thuy Duong Quach, Quoc Vu Dang, Manh Ha Luu, Ewoud J. Smit, Hong Son Mai, Mattias Heinrich, Bram van Ginneken, Mathias Prokop, Alessa Hering

TL;DR
TotalRegistrator is a lightweight, multi-organ CT image registration framework that generalizes well across datasets, using a novel field decomposition strategy and a standard UNet architecture.
Contribution
It introduces a novel, lightweight registration model capable of aligning multiple anatomical regions simultaneously, with a new field decomposition technique and extensive multi-organ training data.
Findings
Outperforms classical iterative algorithms in multi-organ registration
Achieves competitive results on external datasets without fine-tuning
Demonstrates strong generalizability across diverse CT datasets
Abstract
Image registration is a fundamental technique in the analysis of longitudinal and multi-phase CT images within clinical practice. However, most existing methods are tailored for single-organ applications, limiting their generalizability to other anatomical regions. This work presents TotalRegistrator, an image registration framework capable of aligning multiple anatomical regions simultaneously using a standard UNet architecture and a novel field decomposition strategy. The model is lightweight, requiring only 11GB of GPU memory for training. To train and evaluate our method, we constructed a large-scale longitudinal dataset comprising 695 whole-body (thorax-abdomen-pelvic) paired CT scans from individual patients acquired at different time points. We benchmarked TotalRegistrator against a generic classical iterative algorithm and a recent foundation model for image registration. To…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
