Journal of Imaging (Jun 2024)

Automatic Detection of Post-Operative Clips in Mammography Using a U-Net Convolutional Neural Network

  • Tician Schnitzler,
  • Carlotta Ruppert,
  • Patryk Hejduk,
  • Karol Borkowski,
  • Jonas Kajüter,
  • Cristina Rossi,
  • Alexander Ciritsis,
  • Anna Landsmann,
  • Hasan Zaytoun,
  • Andreas Boss,
  • Sebastian Schindera,
  • Felice Burn

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jimaging10060147
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 6
p. 147

Abstract

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Background: After breast conserving surgery (BCS), surgical clips indicate the tumor bed and, thereby, the most probable area for tumor relapse. The aim of this study was to investigate whether a U-Net-based deep convolutional neural network (dCNN) may be used to detect surgical clips in follow-up mammograms after BCS. Methods: 884 mammograms and 517 tomosynthetic images depicting surgical clips and calcifications were manually segmented and classified. A U-Net-based segmentation network was trained with 922 images and validated with 394 images. An external test dataset consisting of 39 images was annotated by two radiologists with up to 7 years of experience in breast imaging. The network’s performance was compared to that of human readers using accuracy and interrater agreement (Cohen’s Kappa). Results: The overall classification accuracy on the validation set after 45 epochs ranged between 88.2% and 92.6%, indicating that the model’s performance is comparable to the decisions of a human reader. In 17.4% of cases, calcifications have been misclassified as post-operative clips. The interrater reliability of the model compared to the radiologists showed substantial agreement (κreader1 = 0.72, κreader2 = 0.78) while the readers compared to each other revealed a Cohen’s Kappa of 0.84, thus showing near-perfect agreement. Conclusions: With this study, we show that surgery clips can adequately be identified by an AI technique. A potential application of the proposed technique is patient triage as well as the automatic exclusion of post-operative cases from PGMI (Perfect, Good, Moderate, Inadequate) evaluation, thus improving the quality management workflow.

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