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Identification of pulmonary nodules via CT images with hierarchical fully convolutional networks.

Authors :
Chen, Genlang
Zhang, Jiajian
Zhuo, Deyun
Pan, Yuning
Pang, Chaoyi
Source :
Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing. Jul2019, Vol. 57 Issue 7, p1567-1580. 14p. 5 Color Photographs, 6 Diagrams, 7 Charts, 4 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Lung cancer is one of the most diagnosable forms of cancer worldwide. The early diagnoses of pulmonary nodules in computed tomography (CT) chest scans are crucial for potential patients. Recent researches have showed that the methods based on deep learning have made a significant progress for the medical diagnoses. However, the achievements on identification of pulmonary nodules are not yet satisfactory enough to be adopted in clinical practice. It is largely caused by either the existence of many false positives or the heavy time of processing. With the development of fully convolutional networks (FCNs), in this study, we proposed a new method of identifying the pulmonary nodules. The method segments the suspected nodules from their environments and then removes the false positives. Especially, it optimizes the network architecture for the identification of nodules rapidly and accurately. In order to remove the false positives, the suspected nodules are reduced using the 2D models. Furthermore, according to the significant differences between nodules and non-nodules in 3D shapes, the false positives are eliminated by integrating into the 3D models and classified via 3D CNNs. The experiments on 1000 patients indicate that our proposed method achieved 97.78% sensitivity rate for segmentation and 90.1% accuracy rate for detection. The maximum response time was less than 30 s and the average time was about 15 s. Graphical Abstract This paper has proposed a new method of identifying the pulmonary nodules. The method segments the suspected nodules from CT images and removes the false positives. As shown in the above, the proposed approach consists of three stages. In stage I, raw data are filtered and normalized. The clean normalized data are then segmented in stage II to extract the suspected nodular lesions through 2D FCNs. Stage III is to remove some false positives generated at stage II via 3D CNNs and outputs the final results. The experiments on 1000 patients indicate that our proposed method has achieved 97.78% sensitivity rate for segmentation and 90.1% accuracy rate for detection. The maximum response time was less than 30 s and the average time was about 15 s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01400118
Volume :
57
Issue :
7
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
137162500
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11517-019-01976-1