Abstract

The latest international multidisciplinary histopathological classification of lung cancer indicates that a deeper study of the lung adenocarcinoma requires a comprehensive multidisciplinary platform. However, in the traditional pathological examination or previous computer-vision-based research, the entire lung is not considered in a comprehensivemanner. The study aims to develop a deep learning model proposed for diagnosing the lung adenocarcinoma histopathologically based on CT scans. Instead of just classifying the lung adenocarcinoma, the pathological report should be inferred based on both the invasiveness and growth pattern of thetumors. A self-distillation trained multitask dense-attention network (SD-MdaNet) is proposed and validated based on 2412 labeled CT scans from 476 patients and 845 unlabeled scans. Inferring the pathological report is divided into two tasks, predicting the invasiveness of the lung tumor and inferring growth patterns of tumor cells in a comprehensive histopathological subtyping manner with excellent accuracy. In the proposed method, the dense-attention module is introduced to better extract features from a small dataset in the main branch of the MdaNet. Next, task-specific attention modules are utilized in different branches and finally integrated as a multitask model. The second task is a blend of classification and regression tasks. Thus, a specialized loss function is developed. In the proposed knowledge distillation (KD) process, the MdaNet as well as its main branch trained for solving two single tasks, respectively, are treated as multiple teachers to produce a student model. A novel KD loss function is developed to take the advantage of all the models as well as data with labels and withoutlabels. SD-MdaNet achieves an AUC of on invasiveness prediction, and on predominant growth pattern prediction on our dataset. Moreover, the average mean squared error in inferring growth pattern proportion reaches , and the AUC for predominant growth pattern proportion reaches . The proposed SD-MdaNet is significantly better than all other benchmarking methods ( ). Experimental results demonstrate that the proposed SD-MdaNet can significantly improve the performance of the lung adenocarcinoma pathological diagnosis using only CT scans. Analyses and discussions are conducted to interpret the advantages of theSD-MdaNet.

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