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Multimodal modeling with low-dose CT and clinical information for diagnostic artificial intelligence on mediastinal tumors: a preliminary study.
Yamada, Daisuke; Kojima, Fumitsugu; Otsuka, Yujiro; Kawakami, Kouhei; Koishi, Naoki; Oba, Ken; Bando, Toru; Matsusako, Masaki; Kurihara, Yasuyuki.
Afiliação
  • Yamada D; Department of Radiology, Saint Luke's International Hospital, Chuo-ku, Japan dsyama@luke.ac.jp.
  • Kojima F; Department of Thoracic Surgery, Saint Luke's International Hospital, Chuo-ku, Japan.
  • Otsuka Y; Department of Radiology, Juntendo University, Bunkyo-ku, Japan.
  • Kawakami K; Plusman LLC, Tokyo, Japan.
  • Koishi N; Department of Radiology, Saint Luke's International Hospital, Chuo-ku, Japan.
  • Oba K; Department of Radiology, Saint Luke's International Hospital, Chuo-ku, Japan.
  • Bando T; Department of Radiology, Saint Luke's International Hospital, Chuo-ku, Japan.
  • Matsusako M; Department of Thoracic Surgery, Saint Luke's International Hospital, Chuo-ku, Japan.
  • Kurihara Y; Department of Radiology, Saint Luke's International Hospital, Chuo-ku, Japan.
BMJ Open Respir Res ; 11(1)2024 Apr 08.
Article em En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38589197
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

Diagnosing mediastinal tumours, including incidental lesions, using low-dose CT (LDCT) performed for lung cancer screening, is challenging. It often requires additional invasive and costly tests for proper characterisation and surgical planning. This indicates the need for a more efficient and patient-centred approach, suggesting a gap in the existing diagnostic methods and the potential for artificial intelligence technologies to address this gap. This study aimed to create a multimodal hybrid transformer model using the Vision Transformer that leverages LDCT features and clinical data to improve surgical decision-making for patients with incidentally detected mediastinal tumours.

METHODS:

This retrospective study analysed patients with mediastinal tumours between 2010 and 2021. Patients eligible for surgery (n=30) were considered 'positive,' whereas those without tumour enlargement (n=32) were considered 'negative.' We developed a hybrid model combining a convolutional neural network with a transformer to integrate imaging and clinical data. The dataset was split in a 532 ratio for training, validation and testing. The model's efficacy was evaluated using a receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis across 25 iterations of random assignments and compared against conventional radiomics models and models excluding clinical data.

RESULTS:

The multimodal hybrid model demonstrated a mean area under the curve (AUC) of 0.90, significantly outperforming the non-clinical data model (AUC=0.86, p=0.04) and radiomics models (random forest AUC=0.81, p=0.008; logistic regression AUC=0.77, p=0.004).

CONCLUSION:

Integrating clinical and LDCT data using a hybrid transformer model can improve surgical decision-making for mediastinal tumours, showing superiority over models lacking clinical data integration.
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Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Neoplasias Pulmonares / Neoplasias do Mediastino Limite: Humans Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Coleções: 01-internacional Base de dados: MEDLINE Assunto principal: Neoplasias Pulmonares / Neoplasias do Mediastino Limite: Humans Idioma: En Ano de publicação: 2024 Tipo de documento: Article