Machine Learning in Stroke Lesion Segmentation and Recovery Forecasting: A Review

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Abstract

Introduction: Stroke remains a major cause of disability worldwide, and precise identification of stroke lesions is essential for prognosis and rehabilitation planning. Machine learning has emerged as a powerful tool for automating stroke lesion segmentation and outcome prediction; however, these tasks are often studied in isolation. The two strategies are inherently interdependent since segmentation provides lesion-based features that directly inform prediction models. Methods: This narrative review synthesises studies published between 2010 and 2024 on the application of machine learning in stroke lesion segmentation and recovery forecasting. A total of 23 relevant studies were reviewed, including 10 focused on lesion segmentation and 13 on recovery prediction. Results: Convolutional Neural Networks (CNNs), including architectures such as U-Net, have improved segmentation accuracy on the Anatomical Tracings of Lesions After Stroke (ATLAS) V2 dataset; however, dataset bias and inconsistent evaluation metrics limit comparability. Integrating imaging-derived lesion characteristics with clinical features improves predictive accuracy at a higher level. Furthermore, semi-supervised and self-supervised methods enhanced performance where annotated datasets are scarce. Discussion: The review highlights the interdependence between segmentation and outcome prediction. Reliable segmentation provides biologically meaningful features that underpin recovery forecasting, while prediction tasks validate the clinical relevance of segmentation outputs. This bidirectional relationship underlines the need for unified pipelines integrating lesion segmentation with outcome prediction. Future research can improve generalisability and foster clinically robust models by advancing semi-supervised and self-supervised learning, bridging the gap between automated image analysis and patient-centred prognosis. Conclusion: Accurate lesion segmentation and outcome prediction should be viewed not as separate goals but as mutually reinforcing components of a single pipeline. Progress in segmentation strengthens recovery forecasting, while predictive modelling emphasises the clinical importance of segmentation outputs. This interdependence provides a pathway for developing more effective, generalisable, and relevant AI-driven stroke care tools.

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