Abstract

Background and purpose:Accurate identification of lung cancer subtypes in medical images is of great significance for the diagnosis and treatment of lung cancer. Despite substantial progress in existing methods, they remain challenging due to limited annotated datasets, large intra-class differences, and high inter-class similarities. Methods:To address these challenges, we propose a Frequency Domain Transformer Model (FDTrans) to identify patients’ lung cancer subtypes using the TCGA lung cancer dataset. We add a pre-processing process to transfer histopathological images to the frequency domain using a block-based discrete cosine transform and design a coordinate Coordinate-Spatial Attention Module (CSAM) to obtain critical detail information by reassigning weights to the location information and channel information of different frequency vectors. Then, a Cross-Domain Transformer Block (CDTB) is designed for Y, Cb, and Cr channel features, capturing the long-term dependencies and global contextual connections between different component features. At the same time, feature extraction is performed on the genomic data to obtain specific features. Finally, the image branch and the gene branch are fused, and the classification result is output through the fully connected layer. Results:In 10-fold cross-validation, the method achieves an AUC of 93.16% and overall accuracy of 92.33%, which is better than similar current lung cancer subtypes classification detection methods. Conclusion:This method can help physicians diagnose the subtypes classification of lung cancer in patients and can benefit from both spatial and frequency domain information.

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