Abstract

Leukaemia is a dysfunction that affects the production of white blood cells in the bone marrow. Young cells are abnormally produced, replacing normal blood cells. Consequently, the person suffers problems in transporting oxygen and in fighting infections. This article proposes a convolutional neural network (CNN) named LeukNet that was inspired on convolutional blocks of VGG-16, but with smaller dense layers. To define the LeukNet parameters, we evaluated different CNNs models and fine-tuning methods using 18 image datasets, with different resolution, contrast, colour and texture characteristics. We applied data augmentation operations to expand the training dataset, and the 5-fold cross-validation led to an accuracy of 98.61%. To evaluate the CNNs generalisation ability, we applied a cross-dataset validation technique. The obtained accuracies using cross-dataset experiments on three datasets were 97.04, 82.46 and 70.24%, which overcome the accuracies obtained by current state-of-the-art methods. We conclude that using the most common and deepest CNNs may not be the best choice for applications where the images to be classified differ from those used in pre-training. Additionally, the adopted cross-dataset validation approach proved to be an excellent choice to evaluate the generalisation capability of a model, as it considers the model performance on unseen data, which is paramount for CAD systems.

Highlights

  • We propose LeukNet, which is based on a convolutional neural network (CNN) that uses transfer learning concepts selected according to an extensive study of architectures, advanced training strategies and an in-depth discussion of evaluation

  • In order to go beyond the results obtained by fine-tuning the CNNs, we carried out two additional analyses using the features spaces formed by two models

  • Another study [56] evaluated the impact of colour normalisation in convolutional neural network-based nuclei segmentation in blood smear images, and it was concluded that, despite the colour variability in the original images, the used CNN

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Summary

Introduction

Leukaemia is one of the most dangerous diseases according to the American Cancer. March 2021)), with an estimate of 61,780 new cases and 22,840 deaths in 2019. This disease has an unknown cause and affects the production of white blood cells in the bone marrow. Young cells or blasts are produced abnormally, replacing healthy blood cells, i.e., white blood cells, red blood cells and platelets. The affected person suffers from oxygen transport problems and infections. Among the forms of diagnosis of leukaemia are the lumbar puncture, myelogram, blood count and flow cytometry.

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