Purpose: Deep learning-based analysis of micro-ultrasound images to detect cancerous lesions is a promising tool for improving prostate cancer (PCa) diagnosis. An ideal model should confidently identify cancer while responding with appropriate uncertainty when presented with out-of-distribution inputs that arise during deployment due to imaging artifacts and the biological heterogeneity of patients and prostatic tissue.

Methods: Using micro-ultrasound data from 693 patients across 5 clinical centers who underwent micro-ultrasound guided prostate biopsy, we train and evaluate convolutional neural network models for PCa detection. To improve robustness to out-of-distribution inputs, we employ and comprehensively benchmark several state-of-the-art uncertainty estimation methods.

Results: PCa detection models achieve performance scores up to average AUROC with a 10-fold cross validation setup. Models with uncertainty estimation obtain expected calibration error scores as low as , indicating that confident predictions are very likely to be correct. Visualizations of the model output demonstrate that the model correctly identifies healthy versus malignant tissue.

Conclusion: Deep learning models have been developed to confidently detect PCa lesions from micro-ultrasound. The performance of these models, determined from a large and diverse dataset, is competitive with visual analysis of magnetic resonance imaging, the clinical benchmark to identify PCa lesions for targeted biopsy. Deep learning with micro-ultrasound should be further studied as an avenue for targeted prostate biopsy.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11548-024-03119-wDOI Listing

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