Abstract

Gastrointestinal endoscopy is widely conducted for the early detection of gastric cancer. However, it is often difficult to detect early gastric cancer lesions and accurately evaluate the invasive regions. Our study aimed to develop a detection and segmentation method for early gastric cancer regions from gastrointestinal endoscopic images. In this method, we first collected 1208 healthy and 533 cancer images. The gastric cancer region was detected and segmented from endoscopic images using Mask R-CNN, an instance segmentation method. An endoscopic image was provided to the Mask R-CNN, and a bounding box and a label image of the gastric cancer region were obtained. As a performance evaluation via five-fold cross-validation, sensitivity and false positives (FPs) per image were 96.0% and 0.10 FP/image, respectively. In the evaluation of segmentation of the gastric cancer region, the average Dice index was 71%. These results indicate that our proposed scheme may be useful for the detection of gastric cancer and evaluation of the invasive region in gastrointestinal endoscopy.

Highlights

  • The global incidence of gastric cancer and its subsequent mortality are high [1,2]

  • In the evaluation of segmentation of the gastric cancer region, the average Dice index was 71%. These results indicate that our proposed scheme may be useful for the detection of gastric cancer and evaluation of the invasive region in gastrointestinal endoscopy

  • The miss rate of gastric cancer according to the endoscopic examination was 22.2%, even when two experts were involved in an endoscopic unit [5]

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Summary

Introduction

The global incidence of gastric cancer and its subsequent mortality are high [1,2]. The incidence of gastric cancer increases with age and is expected to further increase with increasing life expectancy worldwide [3]. Endoscopic examination is especially important for the early detection of gastric cancer because of its high sensitivity [4]. The miss rate of gastric cancer according to the endoscopic examination was 22.2%, even when two experts were involved in an endoscopic unit [5]. Similar studies have shown that gastric cancer is overlooked at a certain rate during endoscopy [6,7,8,9]. Endoscopic examination is an excellent tool for detecting gastric cancer, the aforementioned challenges remain. We believe that it is possible to overcome these challenges using computers

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