论文标题
利用临床上与临床相关的次要特征改善了胰腺肿瘤检测
Improved Pancreatic Tumor Detection by Utilizing Clinically-Relevant Secondary Features
论文作者
论文摘要
胰腺癌是与癌症相关死亡的全球主要原因之一。尽管深度学习在计算机辅助诊断和检测方法(CAD)方法中取得了成功,但很少关注胰腺癌的检测。我们提出了一种检测胰腺肿瘤的方法,该方法在周围的解剖结构中利用临床上的特征,从而更好地旨在利用放射科医生的知识,而不是其他常规的深度学习方法。为此,我们收集了一个新的数据集,该数据集由99例胰腺导管腺癌(PDAC)和97例没有胰腺肿瘤的对照病例组成。由于胰腺癌的生长模式,肿瘤可能总是可见为低音病变,因此专家指的是次级外部特征的可见性,这些特征可能表明肿瘤的存在。我们提出了一种基于U-NET样深的CNN的方法,该方法利用了以下外部次要特征:胰管,常见的胆管和胰腺以及处理后的CT扫描。使用这些功能,如果存在这些特征,则该模型将胰腺肿瘤段。这种用于分类和本地化方法的细分实现了99%的敏感性(错过一个情况)和99%的特异性,这比以前的最新方法实现了5%的敏感性。与以前的PDAC检测方法相比,该模型还以合理的精度和较短的推理时间提供位置信息。这些结果提供了显着的性能改善,并强调了在开发新型CAD方法时纳入临床专家知识的重要性。
Pancreatic cancer is one of the global leading causes of cancer-related deaths. Despite the success of Deep Learning in computer-aided diagnosis and detection (CAD) methods, little attention has been paid to the detection of Pancreatic Cancer. We propose a method for detecting pancreatic tumor that utilizes clinically-relevant features in the surrounding anatomical structures, thereby better aiming to exploit the radiologist's knowledge compared to other, conventional deep learning approaches. To this end, we collect a new dataset consisting of 99 cases with pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) and 97 control cases without any pancreatic tumor. Due to the growth pattern of pancreatic cancer, the tumor may not be always visible as a hypodense lesion, therefore experts refer to the visibility of secondary external features that may indicate the presence of the tumor. We propose a method based on a U-Net-like Deep CNN that exploits the following external secondary features: the pancreatic duct, common bile duct and the pancreas, along with a processed CT scan. Using these features, the model segments the pancreatic tumor if it is present. This segmentation for classification and localization approach achieves a performance of 99% sensitivity (one case missed) and 99% specificity, which realizes a 5% increase in sensitivity over the previous state-of-the-art method. The model additionally provides location information with reasonable accuracy and a shorter inference time compared to previous PDAC detection methods. These results offer a significant performance improvement and highlight the importance of incorporating the knowledge of the clinical expert when developing novel CAD methods.