Deep learning-based image analysis offers great potential in clinical practice. However, it faces mainly two challenges: scarcity of large-scale annotated clinical data for training and susceptibility to adversarial data in inference. As an example, an artificial intelligence (AI) system could check patient positioning, by segmenting and evaluating relative positions of anatomical structures in medical images.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: One of the limitations in leveraging the potential of artificial intelligence in X-ray imaging is the limited availability of annotated training data. As X-ray and CT shares similar imaging physics, one could achieve cross-domain data sharing, so to generate labeled synthetic X-ray images from annotated CT volumes as digitally reconstructed radiographs (DRRs). To account for the lower resolution of CT and the CT-generated DRRs as compared to the real X-ray images, we propose the use of super-resolution (SR) techniques to enhance the CT resolution before DRR generation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Chest radiographs (CXRs) are commonly performed in emergency units (EUs), but the interpretation requires radiology experience. We developed an artificial intelligence (AI) system (precommercial) that aims to mimic board-certified radiologists' (BCRs') performance and can therefore support non-radiology residents (NRRs) in clinical settings lacking 24/7 radiology coverage. We validated by quantifying the clinical value of our AI system for radiology residents (RRs) and EU-experienced NRRs in a clinically representative EU setting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Diagnostic accuracy of artificial intelligence (AI) pneumothorax (PTX) detection in chest radiographs (CXR) is limited by the noisy annotation quality of public training data and confounding thoracic tubes (TT). We hypothesize that in-image annotations of the dehiscent visceral pleura for algorithm training boosts algorithm's performance and suppresses confounders.
Methods: Our single-center evaluation cohort of 3062 supine CXRs includes 760 PTX-positive cases with radiological annotations of PTX size and inserted TTs.