Abstract

Adenocarcinoma is a type of cancer that develops in the glands present on the lining of the organs in the human body. It is found that histopathological images, obtained as a result of biopsy, are the most definitive way of diagnosing cancer. The main objective of this work is to use deep learning techniques for the detection and classification of adenocarcinoma using histopathological images of lung and colon tissues with minimal preprocessing. Two approaches have been utilized. The first method entails creating two CNN architectures: CNN with a Softmax classifier (AdenoCanNet) and CNN with an SVM classifier (AdenoCanSVM). The second approach corresponds to training some of the prominent existing architecture such as VGG16, VGG19, LeNet, and ResNet50. The study aims at understanding the performance of various architectures in diagnosing using histopathological images with cases taken separately and taken together, with a full dataset and a subset of the dataset. The LC25000 dataset used consists of 25,000 histopathological images, having both cancerous and normal images from both the lung and colon regions of the human body. The accuracy metric was taken as the defining parameter for determining and comparing the performance of various architectures undertaken during the study. A comparison between the several models used in the study is presented and discussed.

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