Abstract

A brain tumor is an abnormal growth in brain cells that causes damage to various blood vessels and nerves in the human body. An earlier and accurate diagnosis of the brain tumor is of foremost important to avoid future complications. Precise segmentation of brain tumors provides a basis for surgical planning and treatment to doctors. Manual detection using MRI images is computationally complex in cases where the survival of the patient is dependent on timely treatment, and the performance relies on domain expertise. Therefore, computerized detection of tumors is still a challenging task due to significant variations in their location and structure, i.e., irregular shapes and ambiguous boundaries. In this study, we propose a custom Mask Region-based Convolution neural network (Mask RCNN) with a densenet-41 backbone architecture that is trained via transfer learning for precise classification and segmentation of brain tumors. Our method is evaluated on two different benchmark datasets using various quantitative measures. Comparative results show that the custom Mask-RCNN can more precisely detect tumor locations using bounding boxes and return segmentation masks to provide exact tumor regions. Our proposed model achieved an accuracy of 96.3% and 98.34% for segmentation and classification respectively, demonstrating enhanced robustness compared to state-of-the-art approaches.

Highlights

  • A brain tumor is a fatal disease-causing death to thousands of people around the globe

  • We can observe that the presented approach can more accurately localize the brain tumor from the healthy tissues despite discontinuous or blurry boundaries and artifacts in magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)

  • In some existing methods [62,64] segmentation is applied directly to the entire image, which results in misclassification due to the complex background, which reduces the accuracy of the segmentation

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Summary

Introduction

A brain tumor is a fatal disease-causing death to thousands of people around the globe. A brain tumor is mainly caused by abnormal growth in brain tissues. As the skull portion of the human body is inflexible and small, any growth inside the brain may affect the functionality of the human organ depending on its origin and position. It may spread in other parts of the body and affect their functionality [1]. The brain tumor is categorized into two classes, named primary and secondary based on its position. The primary tumor comprises 70% of all brain tumors while the remaining

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