Abstract

BackgroundIncidental breast cancers can be detected on chest computed tomography (CT) scans. With the use of deep learning, the sensitivity of incidental breast cancer detection on chest CT would improve. This study aimed to evaluate the performance of a deep learning algorithm to detect breast cancers on chest CT and to validate the results in the internal and external datasets. Patients and MethodsThis retrospective study collected 1170 preoperative chest CT scans after the diagnosis of breast cancer for algorithm development (n = 1070), internal test (n = 100), and external test (n = 100). A deep learning algorithm based on RetinaNet was developed and tested to detect breast cancer on chest CT. ResultsIn the internal test set, the algorithm detected 96.5% of breast cancers with 13.5 false positives per case (FPs/case). In the external test set, the algorithm detected 96.1% of breast cancers with 15.6 FPs/case. When the candidate probability of 0.3 was used as the cutoff value, the sensitivities were 92.0% with 7.36 FPs/case for the internal test set and 93.0% with 8.85 FPs/case for the external test set. When the candidate probability of 0.4 was used as the cutoff value, the sensitivities were 88.5% with 5.24 FPs/case in the internal test set and 90.7% with 6.3 FPs/case in the external test set. ConclusionThe deep learning algorithm could sensitively detect breast cancer on chest CT in both the internal and external test sets.

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