IPNet: An Interpretable Network with Progressive Loss for Whole-stage Colorectal Disease Diagnosis.
IEEE Trans Med Imaging
; PP2024 Sep 19.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39298304
ABSTRACT
Colorectal cancer plays a dominant role in cancer-related deaths, primarily due to the absence of obvious early-stage symptoms. Whole-stage colorectal disease diagnosis is crucial for assessing lesion evolution and determining treatment plans. However, locality difference and disease progression lead to intra-class disparities and inter-class similarities for colorectal lesion representation. In addition, interpretable algorithms explaining the lesion progression are still lacking, making the prediction process a "black box". In this paper, we propose IPNet, a dual-branch interpretable network with progressive loss for whole-stage colorectal disease diagnosis. The dual-branch architecture captures unbiased features representing diverse localities to suppress intra-class variation. The progressive loss function considers inter-class relationship, using prior knowledge of disease evolution to guide classification. Furthermore, a novel Grain-CAM is designed to interpret IPNet by visualizing pixel-wise attention maps from shallow to deep layers, providing regions semantically related to IPNet's progressive classification. We conducted whole-stage diagnosis on two image modalities, i.e., colorectal lesion classification on 129,893 endoscopic optical images and rectal tumor T-staging on 11,072 endoscopic ultrasound images. IPNet is shown to surpass other state-of-the-art algorithms, accordingly achieving an accuracy of 93.15% and 89.62%. Especially, it establishes effective decision boundaries for challenges like polyp vs. adenoma and T2 vs. T3. The results demonstrate an explainable attempt for colorectal lesion classification at a whole-stage level, and rectal tumor T-staging by endoscopic ultrasound is also unprecedentedly explored. IPNet is expected to be further applied, assisting physicians in whole-stage disease diagnosis and enhancing diagnostic interpretability.
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Colección:
01-internacional
Base de datos:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Revista:
IEEE Trans Med Imaging
Año:
2024
Tipo del documento:
Article
Pais de publicación:
Estados Unidos