Characterization of Pulmonary Nodules Based on Features of Margin Sharpness and Texture.

J Digit Imaging

Center of Imaging Sciences and Medical Physics, Ribeirão Preto Medical School, University of São Paulo, Av. dos Bandeirantes, 3900, Monte Alegre, Ribeirão Preto, São Paulo, 14049-900, Brazil.

Published: August 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Lung cancer is the top cause of cancer deaths globally and often presents as pulmonary nodules, which can be difficult to classify due to various subjective factors.
  • To help with this, the study integrates computational tools to classify pulmonary nodules based on their texture and margin sharpness from CT scans.
  • The research shows that a random forest algorithm provided the best classification performance, but a simpler decision tree with only two features achieved similar sensitivity and specificity.

Article Abstract

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer-related deaths in the world, and one of its manifestations occurs with the appearance of pulmonary nodules. The classification of pulmonary nodules may be a complex task to specialists due to temporal, subjective, and qualitative aspects. Therefore, it is important to integrate computational tools to the early pulmonary nodule classification process, since they have the potential to characterize objectively and quantitatively the lesions. In this context, the goal of this work is to perform the classification of pulmonary nodules based on image features of texture and margin sharpness. Computed tomography scans were obtained from a publicly available image database. Texture attributes were extracted from a co-occurrence matrix obtained from the nodule volume. Margin sharpness attributes were extracted from perpendicular lines drawn over the borders on all nodule slices. Feature selection was performed by different algorithms. Classification was performed by several machine learning classifiers and assessed by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy. Highest classification performance was obtained by a random forest algorithm with all 48 extracted features. However, a decision tree using only two selected features obtained statistically equivalent performance on sensitivity and specificity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6113151PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10278-017-0029-8DOI Listing

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