Deep transfer learning for detection of breast arterial calcifications on mammograms: a comparative study.

Eur Radiol Exp

Radiology Unit, IRCCS Policlinico San Donato, Via Morandi 30, 20097, San Donato Milanese, Italy.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Breast arterial calcifications (BAC) found in mammograms may indicate cardiovascular disease risk, and a study evaluated the performance of eleven pretrained CNNs, specifically focusing on their ability to detect BAC.
  • The research analyzed mammograms from 1,493 women to classify images as BAC or non-BAC, using metrics like AUC-ROC and F-score to assess the effectiveness of the CNNs, with models like VGG and MobileNet showing promising results.
  • The findings suggest that deep transfer learning can effectively automate BAC detection, with shallower networks requiring less training time while still yielding strong performance.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Breast arterial calcifications (BAC) are common incidental findings on routine mammograms, which have been suggested as a sex-specific biomarker of cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. Previous work showed the efficacy of a pretrained convolutional network (CNN), VCG16, for automatic BAC detection. In this study, we further tested the method by a comparative analysis with other ten CNNs.

Material And Methods: Four-view standard mammography exams from 1,493 women were included in this retrospective study and labeled as BAC or non-BAC by experts. The comparative study was conducted using eleven pretrained convolutional networks (CNNs) with varying depths from five architectures including Xception, VGG, ResNetV2, MobileNet, and DenseNet, fine-tuned for the binary BAC classification task. Performance evaluation involved area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC-ROC) analysis, F-score (harmonic mean of precision and recall), and generalized gradient-weighted class activation mapping (Grad-CAM++) for visual explanations.

Results: The dataset exhibited a BAC prevalence of 194/1,493 women (13.0%) and 581/5,972 images (9.7%). Among the retrained models, VGG, MobileNet, and DenseNet demonstrated the most promising results, achieving AUC-ROCs > 0.70 in both training and independent testing subsets. In terms of testing F-score, VGG16 ranked first, higher than MobileNet (0.51) and VGG19 (0.46). Qualitative analysis showed that the Grad-CAM++ heatmaps generated by VGG16 consistently outperformed those produced by others, offering a finer-grained and discriminative localization of calcified regions within images.

Conclusion: Deep transfer learning showed promise in automated BAC detection on mammograms, where relatively shallow networks demonstrated superior performances requiring shorter training times and reduced resources.

Relevance Statement: Deep transfer learning is a promising approach to enhance reporting BAC on mammograms and facilitate developing efficient tools for cardiovascular risk stratification in women, leveraging large-scale mammographic screening programs.

Key Points: • We tested different pretrained convolutional networks (CNNs) for BAC detection on mammograms. • VGG and MobileNet demonstrated promising performances, outperforming their deeper, more complex counterparts. • Visual explanations using Grad-CAM++ highlighted VGG16's superior performance in localizing BAC.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11247067PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s41747-024-00478-6DOI Listing

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