Vaginal intraepithelial neoplasia (VAIN), linked to HPV infection, is a condition that is often overlooked during colposcopy, especially in the vaginal vault area, as clinicians tend to focus more on cervical lesions. This oversight can lead to missed or delayed diagnosis and treatment for patients with VAIN. Timely and accurate classification of VAIN plays a crucial role in the evaluation of vaginal lesions and the formulation of effective diagnostic approaches. The challenge is the high similarity between different classes and the low variability in the same class in colposcopic images, which can affect the accuracy, precision, and recall rates, depending on the image quality and the clinician’s experience. In this study, a dual-branch lesion-aware residual network (DLRNet), designed for small medical sample sizes, is introduced, which classifies vaginal lesions by examining the relationship between cervical and vaginal lesions. The DLRNet model includes four main components: a lesion localization module, a dual-branch classification module, an attention-guidance module, and a pretrained network module. The dual-branch classification module combines the original images with segmentation maps obtained from the lesion localization module using a pretrained ResNet network to fine-tune parameters at different levels, explore lesion-specific features from both global and local perspectives, and facilitate layered interactions. The feature guidance module focuses the local branch network on vaginal-specific features by using spatial and channel attention mechanisms. The final integration involves a shared feature extraction module and independent fully connected layers, which represent and merge the dual-branch inputs. The weighted fusion method effectively integrates multiple inputs, enhancing the discriminative and generalization capabilities of the model. Classification experiments on 1142 collected colposcopic images demonstrate that this method raises the existing classification levels, achieving the classification of VAIN into three lesion grades, thus providing a valuable tool for the early screening of vaginal diseases.
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