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Automatic text classification of actionable radiology reports of tinnitus patients using bidirectional encoder representations from transformer (BERT) and in-domain pre-training (IDPT).
Li, Jia; Lin, Yucong; Zhao, Pengfei; Liu, Wenjuan; Cai, Linkun; Sun, Jing; Zhao, Lei; Yang, Zhenghan; Song, Hong; Lv, Han; Wang, Zhenchang.
Affiliation
  • Li J; Department of Radiology, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University, No. 95 YongAn Road, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China.
  • Lin Y; School of Medical Technology, Beijing Institute of Technology, No.5 Zhongguancun East Road, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China.
  • Zhao P; Department of Radiology, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University, No. 95 YongAn Road, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China.
  • Liu W; Department of Radiology, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University, No. 95 YongAn Road, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China.
  • Cai L; School of Biological Science and Medical Engineering, Beihang University, No.37 XueYuan Road, Beijing, 100191, People's Republic of China.
  • Sun J; Department of Radiology, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University, No. 95 YongAn Road, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China.
  • Zhao L; Department of Radiology, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University, No. 95 YongAn Road, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China.
  • Yang Z; Department of Radiology, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University, No. 95 YongAn Road, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China.
  • Song H; School of Computer Science and Technology, Beijing Institute of Technology, No. 5, South Street, Zhongguancun, Haidian District, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China. songhong@bit.edu.cn.
  • Lv H; Department of Radiology, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University, No. 95 YongAn Road, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China. chrislvhan@126.com.
  • Wang Z; Department of Radiology, Beijing Friendship Hospital, Capital Medical University, No. 95 YongAn Road, Beijing, 100050, People's Republic of China. cjr.wzhch@vip.163.com.
BMC Med Inform Decis Mak ; 22(1): 200, 2022 07 30.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35907966
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

Given the increasing number of people suffering from tinnitus, the accurate categorization of patients with actionable reports is attractive in assisting clinical decision making. However, this process requires experienced physicians and significant human labor. Natural language processing (NLP) has shown great potential in big data analytics of medical texts; yet, its application to domain-specific analysis of radiology reports is limited.

OBJECTIVE:

The aim of this study is to propose a novel approach in classifying actionable radiology reports of tinnitus patients using bidirectional encoder representations from transformer BERT-based models and evaluate the benefits of in domain pre-training (IDPT) along with a sequence adaptation strategy.

METHODS:

A total of 5864 temporal bone computed tomography(CT) reports are labeled by two experienced radiologists as follows (1) normal findings without notable lesions; (2) notable lesions but uncorrelated to tinnitus; and (3) at least one lesion considered as potential cause of tinnitus. We then constructed a framework consisting of deep learning (DL) neural networks and self-supervised BERT models. A tinnitus domain-specific corpus is used to pre-train the BERT model to further improve its embedding weights. In addition, we conducted an experiment to evaluate multiple groups of max sequence length settings in BERT to reduce the excessive quantity of calculations. After a comprehensive comparison of all metrics, we determined the most promising approach through the performance comparison of F1-scores and AUC values.

RESULTS:

In the first experiment, the BERT finetune model achieved a more promising result (AUC-0.868, F1-0.760) compared with that of the Word2Vec-based models(AUC-0.767, F1-0.733) on validation data. In the second experiment, the BERT in-domain pre-training model (AUC-0.948, F1-0.841) performed significantly better than the BERT based model(AUC-0.868, F1-0.760). Additionally, in the variants of BERT fine-tuning models, Mengzi achieved the highest AUC of 0.878 (F1-0.764). Finally, we found that the BERT max-sequence-length of 128 tokens achieved an AUC of 0.866 (F1-0.736), which is almost equal to the BERT max-sequence-length of 512 tokens (AUC-0.868,F1-0.760).

CONCLUSION:

In conclusion, we developed a reliable BERT-based framework for tinnitus diagnosis from Chinese radiology reports, along with a sequence adaptation strategy to reduce computational resources while maintaining accuracy. The findings could provide a reference for NLP development in Chinese radiology reports.
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Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Radiology / Tinnitus Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Humans Language: En Year: 2022 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Radiology / Tinnitus Type of study: Prognostic_studies Limits: Humans Language: En Year: 2022 Type: Article