4.6 Article

Recurrent attention network for false positive reduction in the detection of pulmonary nodules in thoracic CT scans

Journal

MEDICAL PHYSICS
Volume 47, Issue 5, Pages 2150-2160

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mp.14076

Keywords

chest CT; computer-aided diagnosis; LUNA challenge; pulmonary nodule detection; recurrent neural network

Funding

  1. Office of Women's Health grant from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration
  2. U.S. Food and Drug Administration
  3. Bioimaging Endowment
  4. J.B. Speed School of Engineering at the University of Louisville
  5. U.S. Department of Energy

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Purpose Multiview two-dimensional (2D) convolutional neural networks (CNNs) and three-dimensional (3D) CNNs have been successfully used for analyzing volumetric data in many state-of-the-art medical imaging applications. We propose an alternative modular framework that analyzes volumetric data with an approach that is analogous to radiologists' interpretation, and apply the framework to reduce false positives that are generated in computer-aided detection (CADe) systems for pulmonary nodules in thoracic computed tomography (CT) scans. Methods In our approach, a deep network consisting of 2D CNNs first processes slices individually. The features extracted in this stage are then passed to a recurrent neural network (RNN), thereby modeling consecutive slices as a sequence of temporal data and capturing the contextual information across all three dimensions in the volume of interest. Outputs of the RNN layer are weighed before the final fully connected layer, enabling the network to scale the importance of different slices within a volume of interest in an end-to-end training framework. Results We validated the proposed architecture on the false positive reduction track of the lung nodule analysis (LUNA) challenge for pulmonary nodule detection in chest CT scans, and obtained competitive results compared to 3D CNNs. Our results show that the proposed approach can encode the 3D information in volumetric data effectively by achieving a sensitivity >0.8 with just 1/8 false positives per scan. Conclusions Our experimental results demonstrate the effectiveness of temporal analysis of volumetric images for the application of false positive reduction in chest CT scans and show that state-of-the-art 2D architectures from the literature can be directly applied to analyzing volumetric medical data. As newer and better 2D architectures are being developed at a much faster rate compared to 3D architectures, our approach makes it easy to obtain state-of-the-art performance on volumetric data using new 2D architectures.

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