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1.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging ; 43(1): 416-426, 2024 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37651492

RESUMO

Deep learning methods are often hampered by issues such as data imbalance and data-hungry. In medical imaging, malignant or rare diseases are frequently of minority classes in the dataset, featured by diversified distribution. Besides that, insufficient labels and unseen cases also present conundrums for training on the minority classes. To confront the stated problems, we propose a novel Hierarchical-instance Contrastive Learning (HCLe) method for minority detection by only involving data from the majority class in the training stage. To tackle inconsistent intra-class distribution in majority classes, our method introduces two branches, where the first branch employs an auto-encoder network augmented with three constraint functions to effectively extract image-level features, and the second branch designs a novel contrastive learning network by taking into account the consistency of features among hierarchical samples from majority classes. The proposed method is further refined with a diverse mini-batch strategy, enabling the identification of minority classes under multiple conditions. Extensive experiments have been conducted to evaluate the proposed method on three datasets of different diseases and modalities. The experimental results show that the proposed method outperforms the state-of-the-art methods.

2.
Radiol Artif Intell ; 3(5): e200248, 2021 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34617026

RESUMO

PURPOSE: To evaluate the performance of a deep learning-based algorithm for automatic detection and labeling of rib fractures from multicenter chest CT images. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This retrospective study included 10 943 patients (mean age, 55 years; 6418 men) from six hospitals (January 1, 2017 to December 30, 2019), which consisted of patients with and without rib fractures who underwent CT. The patients were separated into one training set (n = 2425), two lesion-level test sets (n = 362 and 105), and one examination-level test set (n = 8051). Free-response receiver operating characteristic (FROC) score (mean sensitivity of seven different false-positive rates), precision, sensitivity, and F1 score were used as metrics to assess rib fracture detection performance. Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC), sensitivity, and specificity were employed to evaluate the classification accuracy. The mean Dice coefficient and accuracy were used to assess the performance of rib labeling. RESULTS: In the detection of rib fractures, the model showed an FROC score of 84.3% on test set 1. For test set 2, the algorithm achieved a detection performance (precision, 82.2%; sensitivity, 84.9%; F1 score, 83.3%) comparable to three radiologists (precision, 81.7%, 98.0%, 92.0%; sensitivity, 91.2%, 78.6%, 69.2%; F1 score, 86.1%, 87.2%, 78.9%). When the radiologists used the algorithm, the mean sensitivity of the three radiologists showed an improvement (from 79.7% to 89.2%), with precision achieving similar performance (from 90.6% to 88.4%). Furthermore, the model achieved an AUC of 0.93 (95% CI: 0.91, 0.94), sensitivity of 87.9% (95% CI: 83.7%, 91.4%), and specificity of 85.3% (95% CI: 74.6%, 89.8%) on test set 3. On a subset of test set 1, the model achieved a Dice score of 0.827 with an accuracy of 96.0% for rib segmentation. CONCLUSION: The developed deep learning algorithm was capable of detecting rib fractures, as well as corresponding anatomic locations on CT images.Keywords CT, Ribs© RSNA, 2021.

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