Abstract

Lung Cancer is one of the most deadly diseases worldwide. According to the American Cancer Society, about 234,030 peoples have been suffering from lung cancer. It can be cured if it is diagnosed earlier which decreases the death rate. A computational diagnostic tool named Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD) is used to detect pulmonary nodules. Extensive work has been made in this domain. However, previous Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD) system are time-consuming since they needed more modules such as image modification, segmentation and the features should be extracted by the domain experts to build the entire CAD system. It is hard to examine large data using the existing CAD system. Thus, a novel framework with a Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) to detect pulmonary nodule is proposed. Firstly, a preprocessing technique named bilateral filtering is applied to increase the image quality and remove the irrelevant noise from the Computer Tomography (CT) images. Secondly, the preprocessed data are trained into a convolutional neural network to detect the nodule and classify it. The performance of this system is validated using the Lung Image Database Consortium (LIDC) dataset. The accuracy of nodule candidate detection achieves 93%. It states that the proposed method achieves better accuracy in nodule detection.

Highlights

  • Cancer is a type of disease which damage cells in our body

  • The networks were trained with the Stochastic Gradient Decent Momentum (SGDM) optimization technique with the initial parameters

  • We have developed a Computer Aided Diagnosis (CAD) system to detect the nodules in Computer Tomography (CT) images

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cancer is a type of disease which damage cells in our body. There are various types of cell, which will cause different types of cancers in our body. A set of cancer will form a tumor which will affect the normal healthy tissues. There are two types of tumor cells which are classified as benign or malignant. The malignant tumors refer to cancer whereas benign tumors will not affect the other cells. Lung cancer has been classified into two types based on the size of the cell in microscopic appearance: Small Cell Lung Cancer (SCLC) and NonSmall Lung Cancer (NSCLC). Early detection helps to increase the survival rate of the cancerous patients (Soo et al, 2015; Aggarwal et al, 2016)

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call