Abstract

BackgroundCADe and CADx systems for the detection and diagnosis of lung cancer have been important areas of research in recent decades. However, these areas are being worked on separately. CADe systems do not present the radiological characteristics of tumors, and CADx systems do not detect nodules and do not have good levels of automation. As a result, these systems are not yet widely used in clinical settings.MethodsThe purpose of this article is to develop a new system for detection and diagnosis of pulmonary nodules on CT images, grouping them into a single system for the identification and characterization of the nodules to improve the level of automation. The article also presents as contributions: the use of Watershed and Histogram of oriented Gradients (HOG) techniques for distinguishing the possible nodules from other structures and feature extraction for pulmonary nodules, respectively. For the diagnosis, it is based on the likelihood of malignancy allowing more aid in the decision making by the radiologists. A rule-based classifier and Support Vector Machine (SVM) have been used to eliminate false positives.ResultsThe database used in this research consisted of 420 cases obtained randomly from LIDC-IDRI. The segmentation method achieved an accuracy of 97 % and the detection system showed a sensitivity of 94.4 % with 7.04 false positives per case. Different types of nodules (isolated, juxtapleural, juxtavascular and ground-glass) with diameters between 3 mm and 30 mm have been detected. For the diagnosis of malignancy our system presented ROC curves with areas of: 0.91 for nodules highly unlikely of being malignant, 0.80 for nodules moderately unlikely of being malignant, 0.72 for nodules with indeterminate malignancy, 0.67 for nodules moderately suspicious of being malignant and 0.83 for nodules highly suspicious of being malignant.Conclusions From our preliminary results, we believe that our system is promising for clinical applications assisting radiologists in the detection and diagnosis of lung cancer.

Highlights

  • Computer-Aided Detection (CADe) and CADx systems for the detection and diagnosis of lung cancer have been important areas of research in recent decades

  • We propose a new approach to CAD systems encompassing detection of different types of nodules and the determination of the likelihood of malignancy of the nodules through computed tomography scans

  • Materials The database used in this research consisted of 420 cases, randomly obtained from LIDC-IDRI (Lung Image Database Consortium) [23]

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Summary

Introduction

CADe and CADx systems for the detection and diagnosis of lung cancer have been important areas of research in recent decades. These areas are being worked on separately. CADe systems do not present the radiological characteristics of tumors, and CADx systems do not detect nodules and do not have good levels of automation As a result, these systems are not yet widely used in clinical settings. CT provides images with high spatial resolution, high temporal resolution and high resolution of contrast of anatomical structures of the chest This way, it is possible to display small nodules that could hardly be viewed on conventional radiography [3]. Computer systems become indispensable to assist radiologists in their decision making

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