Abstract
Background and objectiveComputer-aided detection (CADe) of microcalcification clusters (MCs) in digital breast tomosynthesis (DBT) is crucial in the early diagnosis of breast cancer. Although convolutional neural network (CNN)-based detection models have achieved excellent performance in medical lesion detection, they are subject to some limitations in MC detection: 1) Most existing models employ the feature pyramid network (FPN) for multi-scale object detection; however, the rough feature sharing between adjacent layers in the FPN may limit the detection ability for small and low-contrast MCs; and 2) the MCs region only accounts for a small part of the annotation box, so the features extracted indiscriminately within the whole box may easily be affected by the background. In this paper, we develop a novel CNN-based CADe method to alleviate the impacts of the above limitations for the accurate and rapid detection of MCs in DBT. MethodsThe proposed method has two parts: a novel context attention pyramid network (CAPNet) for intra-layer MC detection in two-dimensional (2D) slices and a three-dimensional (3D) aggregation procedure for aggregating 2D intra-layer MCs into a 3D result according to their connectivity in 3D space. The proposed CAPNet is based on an anchor-free and one-stage detection architecture and contains a context feature selection fusion (CFSF) module and a microcalcification response (MCR) branch. The CFSF module can efficiently enrich shallow layers’ features by the complementary selection of local context features, aiming to reduce the missed detection of small and low-contrast MCs. The MCR branch is a one-layer branch parallel to the classification branch, which can alleviate the influence of the background region within the annotation box on feature extraction and enhance the ability of the model to distinguish MCs from normal breast tissue. ResultsWe performed a comparison experiment on an in-house clinical dataset with 648 DBT volumes, and the proposed method achieved impressive performance with a sensitivity of 91.56 % at 1 false positive per DBT volume (FPs/volume) and 93.51 % at 2 FPs/volume, outperforming other representative detection models. ConclusionsThe experimental results indicate that the proposed method is effective in the detection of MCs in DBT. This method can provide objective, accurate, and quick diagnostic suggestions for radiologists, presenting potential clinical value for early breast cancer screening.
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