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research article

Deep learning predicts malignancy and metastasis of solid pulmonary nodules from CT scans

Mu, Junhao
•
Kuang, Kaiming
•
Ao, Min
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May 19, 2023
Frontiers In Medicine

In the clinic, it is difficult to distinguish the malignancy and aggressiveness of solid pulmonary nodules (PNs). Incorrect assessments may lead to delayed diagnosis and an increased risk of complications. We developed and validated a deep learning-based model for the prediction of malignancy as well as local or distant metastasis in solid PNs based on CT images of primary lesions during initial diagnosis. In this study, we reviewed the data from multiple patients with solid PNs at our institution from 1 January 2019 to 30 April 2022. The patients were divided into three groups: benign, Ia-stage lung cancer, and T1-stage lung cancer with metastasis. Each cohort was further split into training and testing groups. The deep learning system predicted the malignancy and metastasis status of solid PNs based on CT images, and then we compared the malignancy prediction results among four different levels of clinicians. Experiments confirmed that human-computer collaboration can further enhance diagnostic accuracy. We made a held-out testing set of 134 cases, with 689 cases in total. Our convolutional neural network model reached an area under the ROC (AUC) of 80.37% for malignancy prediction and an AUC of 86.44% for metastasis prediction. In observer studies involving four clinicians, the proposed deep learning method outperformed a junior respiratory clinician and a 5-year respiratory clinician by considerable margins; it was on par with a senior respiratory clinician and was only slightly inferior to a senior radiologist. Our human-computer collaboration experiment showed that by simply adding binary human diagnosis into model prediction probabilities, model AUC scores improved to 81.80-88.70% when combined with three out of four clinicians. In summary, the deep learning method can accurately diagnose the malignancy of solid PNs, improve its performance when collaborating with human experts, predict local or distant metastasis in patients with T1-stage lung cancer, and facilitate the application of precision medicine.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.3389/fmed.2023.1145846
Web of Science ID

WOS:000999576700001

Author(s)
Mu, Junhao
Kuang, Kaiming
Ao, Min
Li, Weiyi
Dai, Haiyun
Ouyang, Zubin
Li, Jingyu
Huang, Jing
Guo, Shuliang
Yang, Jiancheng  
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Date Issued

2023-05-19

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA

Published in
Frontiers In Medicine
Volume

10

Article Number

1145846

Subjects

Medicine, General & Internal

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General & Internal Medicine

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deep learning

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malignancy

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metastasis

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solid pulmonary nodule

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ct

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lymph-node metastasis

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lung-cancer

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distant metastasis

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adenocarcinoma

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probability

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statistics

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

Available on Infoscience
June 19, 2023
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/198459
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