JYJie Ying
Papers(2)
Weakly supervised seg…Detection of deep myo…
Institutions(1)
University Of Shangha…

Papers

Weakly supervised segmentation of uterus by scribble labeling on endometrial cancer MR images

Uterine segmentation of endometrial cancer MR images can be a valuable diagnostic tool for gynecologists. However, uterine segmentation based on deep learning relies on artificial pixel-level annotation, which is time-consuming, laborious and subjective. To reduce the dependence on pixel-level annotation, a method of weakly supervised uterine segmentation on endometrial cancer MRI slices is proposed, which only requires scribble label and is enhanced by pseudo-label technology, exponential geodesic distance loss and input disturbance strategy. Specifically, the limitations caused by the shortage of supervision are addressed by dynamically mixing the two outputs of the dual branch network to generate pseudo-labels, expanding supervision information and promoting mutual supervision training. On the other hand, considering the large difference of grayscale intensity between the uterus and surrounding tissues, the exponential geodesic distance loss is introduced to enhance the ability of the network to capture the edge of the uterus. Input disturbance strategies are incorporated to adapt to the flexible and variable characteristics of the uterus and further improve the segmentation performance of the network. The proposed method is evaluated on MRI images from 135 cases of endometrial cancer. Compared with other four weakly supervised segmentation methods, the performance of the proposed method is the best, whose mean DI, HD

Detection of deep myometrial invasion in endometrial cancer MR imaging based on multi-feature fusion and probabilistic support vector machine ensemble

The depth of myometrial invasion affects the treatment and prognosis of patients with endometrial cancer (EC), conventionally evaluated using MR imaging (MRI). However, only a few computer-aided diagnosis methods have been reported for identifying deep myometrial invasion (DMI) using MRI. Moreover, these existing methods exhibit relatively unsatisfactory sensitivity and specificity. This study proposes a novel computerized method to facilitate the accurate detection of DMI on MRI. This method requires only the corpus uteri region provided by humans or computers instead of the tumor region. We also propose a geometric feature called LS to describe the irregularity of the tissue structure inside the corpus uteri triggered by EC, which has not been leveraged for the DMI prediction model in other studies. Texture features are extracted and then automatically selected by recursive feature elimination. Utilizing a feature fusion strategy of strong and weak features devised in this study, multiple probabilistic support vector machines incorporate LS and texture features, which are then merged to form the ensemble model EPSVM. The model performance is evaluated via leave-one-out cross-validation. We make the following comparisons, EPSVM versus the commonly used classifiers such as random forest, logistic regression, and naive Bayes; EPSVM versus the models using LS or texture features alone. The results show that EPSVM attains an accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and F1 score of 93.7%, 94.7%, 93.3%, and 87.8%, all of which are higher than those of the commonly used classifiers and the models using LS or texture features alone. Compared with the methods in existing studies, EPSVM exhibits high performance in terms of both sensitivity and specificity. Moreover, LS can achieve an accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity of 89.9%, 89.5%, and 90.0%. Thus, the devised geometric feature LS is significant for DMI detection. The fusion of LS and texture features in the proposed EPSVM can provide more reliable prediction. The computer-aided classification based on the proposed method can assist radiologists in accurately identifying DMI on MRI.

8Works
2Papers

Positions

Researcher

University of Shanghai for Science and Technology