Abstract

Cervical cancer can be prevented by having regular screenings to find any precancers and treat them. The Pap test looks for any abnormal or precancerous changes in the cells on the cervix. However, the manual screening of Pap smear in the microscope is subjective with poorly reproducible criteria. Therefore, the aim of this study was to develop a computer-assisted screening system for cervical cancer using digital image processing of Pap smear images. The analysis of Pap smear image is important in the cervical cancer screening system. There were four basic steps in our cervical cancer screening system. In cell segmentation, nuclei were detected using a shape-based iterative method, and the overlapping cytoplasm was separated using a marker-control watershed approach. In the features extraction step, three important features were extracted from the regions of segmented nuclei and cytoplasm. RF (random forest) algorithm was used as a feature selection method. In the classification stage, bagging ensemble classifier, which combined the results of five classifiers—LD (linear discriminant), SVM (support vector machine), KNN (k-nearest neighbor), boosted trees, and bagged trees—was applied. SIPaKMeD and Herlev datasets were used to prove the effectiveness of our proposed system. According to the experimental results, 98.27% accuracy in two-class classification and 94.09% accuracy in five-class classification was achieved using the SIPaKMeD dataset. When the results were compared with five classifiers, our proposed method was significantly better in two-class and five-class problems.

Highlights

  • Cancer is the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells in the body

  • 90% of deaths from cervical cancer occur in low- and middle-income countries

  • In the multi-cells dataset, there were 996 images, and 4049 cells were were cropped from these total images. These cells were divided into five classes, class1

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer is the uncontrolled growth of abnormal cells in the body. Rather than responding appropriately to the signals that control normal cell behavior, cancer cells grow and divide in an uncontrolled manner, invading normal tissues and organs and eventually spreading throughout the body [1]. Cervical cancer is cancer arising from the cervix. The most important risk factor for cervical cancer is infection with human papillomavirus (HPV). The goal of cervical screening is to identify and remove significant precancerous lesions in addition to preventing mortality from invasive cancer. 90% of deaths from cervical cancer occur in low- and middle-income countries. Symptoms of cervical cancer include irregular intermenstrual (between periods) or abnormal vaginal bleeding after sexual intercourse, back, leg or pelvic pain, fatigue, weight

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