Loading…

A Progressive Single-Modality to Multi-Modality Classification Framework for Alzheimer's Disease Sub-type Diagnosis

The current clinical diagnosis framework of Alzheimer's disease (AD) involves multiple modalities acquired from multiple diagnosis stages, each with distinct usage and cost. Previous AD diagnosis research has predominantly focused on how to directly fuse multiple modalities for an end-to-end on...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:arXiv.org 2024-07
Main Authors: Liu, Yuxiao, Liu, Mianxin, Zhang, Yuanwang, Sun, Kaicong, Shen, Dinggang
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:The current clinical diagnosis framework of Alzheimer's disease (AD) involves multiple modalities acquired from multiple diagnosis stages, each with distinct usage and cost. Previous AD diagnosis research has predominantly focused on how to directly fuse multiple modalities for an end-to-end one-stage diagnosis, which practically requires a high cost in data acquisition. Moreover, a significant part of these methods diagnose AD without considering clinical guideline and cannot offer accurate sub-type diagnosis. In this paper, by exploring inter-correlation among multiple modalities, we propose a novel progressive AD sub-type diagnosis framework, aiming to give diagnosis results based on easier-to-access modalities in earlier low-cost stages, instead of modalities from all stages. Specifically, first, we design 1) a text disentanglement network for better processing tabular data collected in the initial stage, and 2) a modality fusion module for fusing multi-modality features separately. Second, we align features from modalities acquired in earlier low-cost stage(s) with later high-cost stage(s) to give accurate diagnosis without actual modality acquisition in later-stage(s) for saving cost. Furthermore, we follow the clinical guideline to align features at each stage for achieving sub-type diagnosis. Third, we leverage a progressive classifier that can progressively include additional acquired modalities (if needed) for diagnosis, to achieve the balance between diagnosis cost and diagnosis performance. We evaluate our proposed framework on large diverse public and in-home datasets (8280 in total) and achieve superior performance over state-of-the-art methods. Our codes will be released after the acceptance.
ISSN:2331-8422