332 research outputs found

    A review of artificial intelligence in prostate cancer detection on imaging

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    A multitude of studies have explored the role of artificial intelligence (AI) in providing diagnostic support to radiologists, pathologists, and urologists in prostate cancer detection, risk-stratification, and management. This review provides a comprehensive overview of relevant literature regarding the use of AI models in (1) detecting prostate cancer on radiology images (magnetic resonance and ultrasound imaging), (2) detecting prostate cancer on histopathology images of prostate biopsy tissue, and (3) assisting in supporting tasks for prostate cancer detection (prostate gland segmentation, MRI-histopathology registration, MRI-ultrasound registration). We discuss both the potential of these AI models to assist in the clinical workflow of prostate cancer diagnosis, as well as the current limitations including variability in training data sets, algorithms, and evaluation criteria. We also discuss ongoing challenges and what is needed to bridge the gap between academic research on AI for prostate cancer and commercial solutions that improve routine clinical care

    Deep learning model for automatic prostate segmentation on bicentric T2w images with and without endorectal coil

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    Automatic segmentation of the prostate on Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) is one of the topics on which research has focused in recent years as it is a fundamental first step in the building process of a Computer aided diagnosis (CAD) system for cancer detection. Unfortunately, MRI acquired in different centers with different scanners leads to images with different characteristics. In this work, we propose an automatic algorithm for prostate segmentation, based on a U-Net applying transfer learning method in a bi-center setting. First, T2w images with and without endorectal coil from 80 patients acquired at Center A were used as training set and internal validation set. Then, T2w images without endorectal coil from 20 patients acquired at Center B were used as external validation. The reference standard for this study was manual segmentation of the prostate gland performed by an expert operator. The results showed a Dice similarity coefficient >85% in both internal and external validation datasets.Clinical Relevance- This segmentation algorithm could be integrated into a CAD system to optimize computational effort in prostate cancer detection

    Prostate Cancer Diagnosis using Magnetic Resonance Imaging - a Machine Learning Approach

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    Domain Adaptation for Novel Imaging Modalities with Application to Prostate MRI

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    The need for training data can impede the adoption of novel imaging modalities for deep learning-based medical image analysis. Domain adaptation can mitigate this problem by exploiting training samples from an existing, densely-annotated source domain within a novel, sparsely-annotated target domain, by bridging the differences between the two domains. In this thesis we present methods for adapting between diffusion-weighed (DW)-MRI data from multiparametric (mp)-MRI acquisitions and VERDICT (Vascular, Extracellular and Restricted Diffusion for Cytometry in Tumors) MRI, a richer DW-MRI technique involving an optimized acquisition protocol for cancer characterization. We also show that the proposed methods are general and their applicability extends beyond medical imaging. First, we propose a semi-supervised domain adaptation method for prostate lesion segmentation on VERDICT MRI. Our approach relies on stochastic generative modelling to translate across two heterogeneous domains at pixel-space and exploits the inherent uncertainty in the cross-domain mapping to generate multiple outputs conditioned on a single input. We further extend this approach to the unsupervised scenario where there is no labeled data for the target domain. We rely on stochastic generative modelling to translate across the two domains at pixel space and introduce two loss functions that promote semantic consistency. Finally we demonstrate that the proposed approaches extend beyond medical image analysis and focus on unsupervised domain adaptation for semantic segmentation of urban scenes. We show that relying on stochastic generative modelling allows us to train more accurate target networks and achieve state-of-the-art performance on two challenging semantic segmentation benchmarks

    Automatic analysis of medical images for change detection in prostate cancer

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    Prostate cancer is the most common cancer and second most common cause of cancer death in men in the UK. However, the patient risk from the cancer can vary considerably, and the widespread use of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) screening has led to over-diagnosis and over-treatment of low-grade tumours. It is therefore important to be able to differentiate high-grade prostate cancer from the slowly- growing, low-grade cancer. Many of these men with low-grade cancer are placed on active surveillance (AS), which involves constant monitoring and intervention for risk reclassification, relying increasingly on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to detect disease progression, in addition to TRUS-guided biopsies which are the routine clinical standard method to use. This results in a need for new tools to process these images. For this purpose, it is important to have a good TRUS-MR registration so corresponding anatomy can be located accurately between the two. Automatic segmentation of the prostate gland on both modalities reduces some of the challenges of the registration, such as patient motion, tissue deformation, and the time of the procedure. This thesis focuses on the use of deep learning methods, specifically convolutional neural networks (CNNs), for prostate cancer management. Chapters 4 and 5 investigated the use of CNNs for both TRUS and MRI prostate gland segmentation, and reported high segmentation accuracies for both, Dice Score Coefficients (DSC) of 0.89 for TRUS segmentations and DSCs between 0.84-0.89 for MRI prostate gland segmentation using a range of networks. Chapter 5 also investigated the impact of these segmentation scores on more clinically relevant measures, such as MRI-TRUS registration errors and volume measures, showing that a statistically significant difference in DSCs did not lead to a statistically significant difference in the clinical measures using these segmentations. The potential of these algorithms in commercial and clinical systems are summarised and the use of the MRI prostate gland segmentation in the application of radiological prostate cancer progression prediction for AS patients are investigated and discussed in Chapter 8, which shows statistically significant improvements in accuracy when using spatial priors in the form of prostate segmentations (0.63 ± 0.16 vs. 0.82 ± 0.18 when comparing whole prostate MRI vs. only prostate gland region, respectively)

    Automatic segmentation of prostate MRI using convolutional neural networks: Investigating the impact of network architecture on the accuracy of volume measurement and MRI-ultrasound registration

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    Convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have recently led to significant advances in automatic segmentations of anatomical structures in medical images, and a wide variety of network architectures are now available to the research community. For applications such as segmentation of the prostate in magnetic resonance images (MRI), the results of the PROMISE12 online algorithm evaluation platform have demonstrated differences between the best-performing segmentation algorithms in terms of numerical accuracy using standard metrics such as the Dice score and boundary distance. These small differences in the segmented regions/boundaries outputted by different algorithms may potentially have an unsubstantial impact on the results of downstream image analysis tasks, such as estimating organ volume and multimodal image registration, which inform clinical decisions. This impact has not been previously investigated. In this work, we quantified the accuracy of six different CNNs in segmenting the prostate in 3D patient T2-weighted MRI scans and compared the accuracy of organ volume estimation and MRI-ultrasound (US) registration errors using the prostate segmentations produced by different networks. Networks were trained and tested using a set of 232 patient MRIs with labels provided by experienced clinicians. A statistically significant difference was found among the Dice scores and boundary distances produced by these networks in a non-parametric analysis of variance (p < 0.001 and p < 0.001, respectively), where the following multiple comparison tests revealed that the statistically significant difference in segmentation errors were caused by at least one tested network. Gland volume errors (GVEs) and target registration errors (TREs) were then estimated using the CNN-generated segmentations. Interestingly, there was no statistical difference found in either GVEs or TREs among different networks, (p = 0.34 and p = 0.26, respectively). This result provides a real-world example that these networks with different segmentation performances may potentially provide indistinguishably adequate registration accuracies to assist prostate cancer imaging applications. We conclude by recommending that the differences in the accuracy of downstream image analysis tasks that make use of data output by automatic segmentation methods, such as CNNs, within a clinical pipeline should be taken into account when selecting between different network architectures, in addition to reporting the segmentation accuracy

    Artificial Intelligence and Machine Learning in Prostate Cancer Patient Management-Current Trends and Future Perspectives

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    Artificial intelligence (AI) is the field of computer science that aims to build smart devices performing tasks that currently require human intelligence. Through machine learning (ML), the deep learning (DL) model is teaching computers to learn by example, something that human beings are doing naturally. AI is revolutionizing healthcare. Digital pathology is becoming highly assisted by AI to help researchers in analyzing larger data sets and providing faster and more accurate diagnoses of prostate cancer lesions. When applied to diagnostic imaging, AI has shown excellent accuracy in the detection of prostate lesions as well as in the prediction of patient outcomes in terms of survival and treatment response. The enormous quantity of data coming from the prostate tumor genome requires fast, reliable and accurate computing power provided by machine learning algorithms. Radiotherapy is an essential part of the treatment of prostate cancer and it is often difficult to predict its toxicity for the patients. Artificial intelligence could have a future potential role in predicting how a patient will react to the therapy side effects. These technologies could provide doctors with better insights on how to plan radiotherapy treatment. The extension of the capabilities of surgical robots for more autonomous tasks will allow them to use information from the surgical field, recognize issues and implement the proper actions without the need for human intervention
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