Frontiers in Artificial Intelligence (Oct 2023)

Deep skin diseases diagnostic system with Dual-channel Image and Extracted Text

  • Huanyu Li,
  • Huanyu Li,
  • Peng Zhang,
  • Zikun Wei,
  • Tian Qian,
  • Yiqi Tang,
  • Kun Hu,
  • Xianqiong Huang,
  • Xinxin Xia,
  • Yishuang Zhang,
  • Haixing Cheng,
  • Fubing Yu,
  • Wenjia Zhang,
  • Kena Dan,
  • Xuan Liu,
  • Shujun Ye,
  • Guangqiao He,
  • Xia Jiang,
  • Liwei Liu,
  • Yukun Fan,
  • Tingting Song,
  • Guomin Zhou,
  • Ziyi Wang,
  • Daojun Zhang,
  • Junwei Lv

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/frai.2023.1213620
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6

Abstract

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BackgroundDue to the lower reliability of laboratory tests, skin diseases are more suitable for diagnosis with AI models. There are limited AI dermatology diagnostic models combining images and text; few of these are for Asian populations, and few cover the most common types of diseases.MethodsLeveraging a dataset sourced from Asia comprising over 200,000 images and 220,000 medical records, we explored a deep learning-based system for Dual-channel images and extracted text for the diagnosis of skin diseases model DIET-AI to diagnose 31 skin diseases, which covers the majority of common skin diseases. From 1 September to 1 December 2021, we prospectively collected images from 6,043 cases and medical records from 15 hospitals in seven provinces in China. Then the performance of DIET-AI was compared with that of six doctors of different seniorities in the clinical dataset.ResultsThe average performance of DIET-AI in 31 diseases was not less than that of all the doctors of different seniorities. By comparing the area under the curve, sensitivity, and specificity, we demonstrate that the DIET-AI model is effective in clinical scenarios. In addition, medical records affect the performance of DIET-AI and physicians to varying degrees.ConclusionThis is the largest dermatological dataset for the Chinese demographic. For the first time, we built a Dual-channel image classification model on a non-cancer dermatitis dataset with both images and medical records and achieved comparable diagnostic performance to senior doctors about common skin diseases. It provides references for exploring the feasibility and performance evaluation of DIET-AI in clinical use afterward.

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