Por favor, use este identificador para citar o enlazar este ítem: http://conacyt.repositorioinstitucional.mx/jspui/handle/1000/4164
Improved deep learning model for differentiating novel coronavirus pneumonia and influenza pneumonia
Min Zhou.
Yong Chen.
Dexiang Wang.
Yanping Xu.
Weiwu Yao.
Jingwen Huang.
Xiaoyan Jin.
Zilai Pan.
Jingwen Tan.
Lan Wang.
Yihan Xia.
Longkuan Zou.
Xin Xu.
Jingqi Wei.
Mingxin Guan.
Jianxing Feng.
Huan Zhang.
Jieming Qu.
Acceso Abierto
Atribución-NoComercial-SinDerivadas
10.1101/2020.03.24.20043117
Background: Chest CT had high sensitivity in diagnosing novel coronavirus pneumonia (NCP) at early stage, giving it an advantage over nucleic acid detection in time of crisis. Deep learning was reported to discover intricate structures from clinical images and achieve expert-level performance in medical image analysis. To develop and validate an integrated deep learning framework on chest CT images for auto-detection of NCP, particularly focusing on differentiating NCP from influenza pneumonia (IP). Methods: 35 confirmed NCP cases were consecutively enrolled as training set from 1138 suspected patients in three NCP designated hospitals together with 361 confirmed viral pneumonia patients from center one including 156 IP patients, from May, 2015 to February, 2020. The external validation set enrolled 57 NCP patients and 50 IP patients from eight centers. Results: 96.6% of NCP lesions were larger than 1 cm and 76.8% were with intensity below -500 Hu, indicating less consolidation than IP lesions which had nodules ranging 5-10 mm. The classification schemes accurately distinguished NCP and IP lesions with area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) above 0.93. The Trinary scheme was more device-independent and consistent with specialists than the Plain scheme, which achieved a F1 score of 0.847, higher than the Plain scheme (0.774), specialists (0.785) and residents (0.644). Conclusions: Our study potentially provides an accurate early diagnosis tool on chest CT for NCP with high transferability, and shows high efficiency in differentiating NCP and IP, helping to reduce misdiagnosis and contain the pandemic transmission.
www.medrxiv.org
2020
Artículo
https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2020.03.24.20043117v1.full.pdf
Inglés
VIRUS RESPIRATORIOS
Aparece en las colecciones: Artículos científicos

Cargar archivos:


Fichero Tamaño Formato  
1105937.pdf1.14 MBAdobe PDFVisualizar/Abrir