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Deep Learning for Lung Cancer Detection on Screening CT Scans: Results of a Large-Scale Public Competition and an Observer Study with 11 Radiologists

To determine whether deep learning algorithms developed in a public competition could identify lung cancer on low-dose CT scans with a performance similar to that of radiologists. In this retrospective study, a dataset consisting of 300 patient scans was used for model assessment; 150 patient scans...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Radiology. Artificial intelligence 2021-11, Vol.3 (6), p.e210027-e210027
Main Authors: Jacobs, Colin, Setio, Arnaud A A, Scholten, Ernst T, Gerke, Paul K, Bhattacharya, Haimasree, M Hoesein, Firdaus A, Brink, Monique, Ranschaert, Erik, de Jong, Pim A, Silva, Mario, Geurts, Bram, Chung, Kaman, Schalekamp, Steven, Meersschaert, Joke, Devaraj, Anand, Pinsky, Paul F, Lam, Stephen C, van Ginneken, Bram, Farahani, Keyvan
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Language:English
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Summary:To determine whether deep learning algorithms developed in a public competition could identify lung cancer on low-dose CT scans with a performance similar to that of radiologists. In this retrospective study, a dataset consisting of 300 patient scans was used for model assessment; 150 patient scans were from the competition set and 150 were from an independent dataset. Both test datasets contained 50 cancer-positive scans and 100 cancer-negative scans. The reference standard was set by histopathologic examination for cancer-positive scans and imaging follow-up for at least 2 years for cancer-negative scans. The test datasets were applied to the three top-performing algorithms from the Kaggle Data Science Bowl 2017 public competition: grt123, Julian de Wit and Daniel Hammack (JWDH), and Aidence. Model outputs were compared with an observer study of 11 radiologists that assessed the same test datasets. Each scan was scored on a continuous scale by both the deep learning algorithms and the radiologists. Performance was measured using multireader, multicase receiver operating characteristic analysis. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) was 0.877 (95% CI: 0.842, 0.910) for grt123, 0.902 (95% CI: 0.871, 0.932) for JWDH, and 0.900 (95% CI: 0.870, 0.928) for Aidence. The average AUC of the radiologists was 0.917 (95% CI: 0.889, 0.945), which was significantly higher than grt123 ( = .02); however, no significant difference was found between the radiologists and JWDH ( = .29) or Aidence ( = .26). Deep learning algorithms developed in a public competition for lung cancer detection in low-dose CT scans reached performance close to that of radiologists. Lung, CT, Thorax, Screening, Oncology © RSNA, 2021.
ISSN:2638-6100
2638-6100
DOI:10.1148/ryai.2021210027