Abstract

Prostate cancer (PCa) is the most common cancer afflicting men in USA. Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance imaging is recently emerging as a powerful tool for PCa diagnosis, but its analysis and interpretation is time-consuming and affected by the radiologist experience. Computer aided detection (CAD) systems have been developed to overcome this limitation and to support radiologists in the PCa diagnosis. Although several studies proposed CAD systems with very high performances in terms of sensitivity, the analysis of false positive (FP) areas is usually not clearly presented. The aim of this study is to improve the performance of a CAD system in term of reduction of FPs findings, without affecting the sensitivity. To this scope, we developed a classifier composed by 3 Artificial Neural Networks (ANN) able to distinguish between malignant and healthy areas through a voting strategy. In this method, we exploit the role of the Gray Level Co-occurrence Matrix, the Gray Level Difference Method and Gray Level Run Length Method Matrix in differentiating tumoural from healthy tissues. We first extract 64 textural features from T2-weighted (T2w) images and the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps, then we discretized them to reduce the data variability. A features selection method, based on the correlation matrix, is finally applied to remove redundant variables, that are those highly correlated with others. The remaining set of features is fed into the three ANNs and a post-processing step is applied to remove very small areas. Results applied on a dataset of 58 patients showed a significant decrease of FPs (20 vs 12; p-value < 0.0001) and an increase of the precision of PCa segmentation (0.62 vs 0.71; p-value < 0.0001). Having less FPs is helpful to increase the performance of CAD systems in terms of specificity and to decrease the reporting time of radiologists. Moreover, having more precise PCa segmentation areas could be useful if a step of PCa characterization will be added to the CAD system.

Full Text
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