Abstract

Medical imaging data annotation is expensive and time-consuming. Supervised deep learning approaches may encounter overfitting if trained with limited medical data, and further affect the robustness of computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) on CT scans collected by various scanner vendors. Additionally, the high false-positive rate in automatic lung nodule detection methods prevents their applications in daily clinical routine diagnosis. To tackle these issues, we first introduce a novel self-learning schema to train a pre-trained model by learning rich feature representatives from large-scale unlabeled data without extra annotation, which guarantees a consistent detection performance over novel datasets. Then, a 3D feature pyramid network (3DFPN) is proposed for high-sensitivity nodule detection by extracting multi-scale features, where the weights of the backbone network are initialized by the pre-trained model and then fine-tuned in a supervised manner. Further, a High Sensitivity and Specificity (HS) network is proposed to reduce false positives by tracking the appearance changes among continuous CT slices on Location History Images (LHI) for the detected nodule candidates. The proposed method's performance and robustness are evaluated on several publicly available datasets, including LUNA16, SPIE-AAPM, LungTIME, and HMS. Our proposed detector achieves the state-of-the-art result of sensitivity at false positive per scan on the LUNA16 dataset. The proposed framework's generalizability has been evaluated on three additional datasets (i.e., SPIE-AAPM, LungTIME, and HMS) captured by different types of CT scanners.

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