Abstract

Clinical symptoms and inflammatory markers cannot reliably distinguish the etiology of CAP, and chest radiographs have abundant information related with CAP. Hence, we developed a context-fusion convolution neural network (CNN) to explore the application of chest radiographs to distinguish the etiology of CAP in children. This retrospective study included 1769 cases of pediatric pneumonia (viral pneumonia, n = 487; bacterial pneumonia, n = 496; and mycoplasma pneumonia, n = 786). The chest radiographs of the first examination, C-reactive protein (CRP), and white blood cell (WBC) were collected for analysis. All patients were stochastically divided into training, validation, and test cohorts in a 7:1:2 ratio. Automatic lung segmentation and hand-crafted pneumonia lesion segmentation were performed, from which three image-based models including a full-lung model, a local-lesion model, and a context-fusion model were built; two clinical characteristics were used to build a clinical model, while a logistic regression model combined the best CNN model and two clinical characteristics. Our experiments showed that the context-fusion model which integrated the features of the full-lung and local-lesion had better performance than the full-lung model and local-lesion model. The context-fusion model had area under curves of 0.86, 0.88, and 0.93 in identifying viral, bacterial, and mycoplasma pneumonia on the test cohort respectively. The addition of clinical characteristics to the context-fusion model obtained slight improvement. Mycoplasma pneumonia was more easily identified compared with the other two types. Using chest radiographs, we developed a context-fusion CNN model with good performance for noninvasively diagnosing the etiology of community-acquired pneumonia in children, which would help improve early diagnosis and treatment.

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