Abstract
We developed a few-shot learning (FSL) framework for the diagnosis of osteopenia and osteoporosis in knee X-ray images. Computer vision models containing deep convolutional neural networks were fine-tuned to enable generalization from natural images (ImageNet) to chest X-ray images (normal vs. pneumonia, base images). Then, a series of automated machine learning classifiers based on the Euclidean distances of base images were developed to make predictions for novel images (normal vs. osteopenia vs. osteoporosis). The performance of the FSL framework was compared with that of junior and senior radiologists. In addition, the gradient-weighted class activation mapping algorithm was used for visual interpretation. In Cohort #1, the mean accuracy (0.728) and sensitivity (0.774) of the FSL models were higher than those of the radiologists (0.512 and 0.448). A diagnostic pipeline of FSL model (first)-radiologists (second) achieved better performance (0.653 accuracy, 0.582 sensitivity, and 0.816 specificity) than radiologists alone. In Cohort #2, the diagnostic pipeline also showed improved performance. The FSL framework yielded practical performance with respect to the diagnosis of osteopenia and osteoporosis in comparison with radiologists. This retrospective study supports the use of promising FSL methods in computer-aided diagnosis tasks involving limited samples.
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