Formulation of a deep learning model for automated detection via segmentation of lung cancer
In 2020, the International Agency for Research on Cancer recorded nearly 20 million new cases of cancer around the world. It is estimated that cancer will be the second biggest cause of mortality worldwide in 2020, with over 10 million deaths. In Malaysia, the recorded number of new cases and deaths...
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Main Authors: | , |
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Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Penerbit UMP
2024
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41839/1/Formulation%20of%20A%20Deep%20Learning%20Model%20for%20Automated%20Detection.pdf http://umpir.ump.edu.my/id/eprint/41839/ https://doi.org/10.15282/mekatronika.v6i1.10389 https://doi.org/10.15282/mekatronika.v6i1.10389 |
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Summary: | In 2020, the International Agency for Research on Cancer recorded nearly 20 million new cases of cancer around the world. It is estimated that cancer will be the second biggest cause of mortality worldwide in 2020, with over 10 million deaths. In Malaysia, the recorded number of new cases and deaths due to cancer in 2020 are 48639 and 29530, respectively. Lung cancer is the third most fre-quent cancer in Malaysia, and it also has the highest mortality rate, at 15.3 per-cent. Lung cancer has become a major public health issue in Malaysia, with only a 11% 5-year survival rate. Computed tomography (CT) scanning is the most common tool for early-stage lung cancer screening. One of the clinical signs of early lung cancer on CT imaging is pulmonary nodules, which are characterized as a small, opaque, roundish growth on the lung with a size of 7-30mm. There are two types of pulmonary nodules: benign and malignant (cancerous). The characteristic difference between malignant and benign nodules had make the pulmonary nodules segmentation significant as the radiologist can classify the malignancy of the nodules with the size of the nodules. Furthermore, radiologist can adjust the dosage of medication for malignant nodules patient, according to the size of the pulmonary nodules. The manual detection of pulmonary nodules in CT images is a tiring job as the radiologist may need to watch over 200 CT imag-es per CT scans. Luckily the advancement in machine learning technologies have paved way to new possibilities of pulmonary nodules detection and segmentation. and can integrate automation in solving repetitive manual intensive tasks. There-fore, this research investigates the diagnosis of lung cancer through CT images by using transfer learning and fine-tuning of the encoder. Hyperparameters such as type of number of epochs, optimizer and loss function are investigated on which combinations of these hyperparameters will yield the highest segmentation dice coefficient and Intersect over Union (IoU). Neural network architectures ResNet101 are evaluated as transfer learning encoder in extracting features from the patient’s CT images. The extracted fea-tures are then fed into the DeepLabV3 segmentation head to form a complete segmentation model. Subsequently, evaluating the combination of various pipe-lines, the loss and dice coefficient graphs are used to find the pipeline which performs the best in pulmo-nary nodules segmentation. This study indicated that the DeepLabV3-ResNet101-Adagrad Optimizer-Dice Loss pipeline yield the best performance. The pulmonary nodule segmentation models achieved a Dice Coefficient of 0.7983. The findings in this research will open new possibilities in screening method of lung cancer screening methods, offering more efficient and accurate detection of pulmonary nodules, ultimately improving patient outcomes. |
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