A Two-Stage Approach for Automated Prostate Lesion Detection and Classification with Mask R-CNN and Weakly Supervised Deep Neural Network

Author(s):  
Zhiyu Liu ◽  
Wenhao Jiang ◽  
Kit-Hang Lee ◽  
Yat-Long Lo ◽  
Yui-Lun Ng ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Guoting Luo ◽  
Qing Yang ◽  
Tao Chen ◽  
Tao Zheng ◽  
Wei Xie ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Viacheslav Dudar ◽  
Giovanni Chierchia ◽  
Emilie Chouzenoux ◽  
Jean-Christophe Pesquet ◽  
Vladimir Semenov

IEEE Access ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-1
Author(s):  
Robert Chen-Hao Chang ◽  
Chia-Yu Wang ◽  
Hsin-Han Li ◽  
Cheng-Di Chiu

Cancers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (13) ◽  
pp. 3300
Author(s):  
Jing Gong ◽  
Jiyu Liu ◽  
Haiming Li ◽  
Hui Zhu ◽  
Tingting Wang ◽  
...  

This study aims to develop a deep neural network (DNN)-based two-stage risk stratification model for early lung adenocarcinomas in CT images, and investigate the performance compared with practicing radiologists. A total of 2393 GGNs were retrospectively collected from 2105 patients in four centers. All the pathologic results of GGNs were obtained from surgically resected specimens. A two-stage deep neural network was developed based on the 3D residual network and atrous convolution module to diagnose benign and malignant GGNs (Task1) and classify between invasive adenocarcinoma (IA) and non-IA for these malignant GGNs (Task2). A multi-reader multi-case observer study with six board-certified radiologists’ (average experience 11 years, range 2–28 years) participation was conducted to evaluate the model capability. DNN yielded area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) values of 0.76 ± 0.03 (95% confidence interval (CI): (0.69, 0.82)) and 0.96 ± 0.02 (95% CI: (0.92, 0.98)) for Task1 and Task2, which were equivalent to or higher than radiologists in the senior group with average AUC values of 0.76 and 0.95, respectively (p > 0.05). With the CT image slice thickness increasing from 1.15 mm ± 0.36 to 1.73 mm ± 0.64, DNN performance decreased 0.08 and 0.22 for the two tasks. The results demonstrated (1) a positive trend between the diagnostic performance and radiologist’s experience, (2) the DNN yielded equivalent or even higher performance in comparison with senior radiologists, and (3) low image resolution decreased model performance in predicting the risks of GGNs. Once tested prospectively in clinical practice, the DNN could have the potential to assist doctors in precision diagnosis and treatment of early lung adenocarcinoma.


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