IEEE Access (Jan 2020)

MaligNet: Semisupervised Learning for Bone Lesion Instance Segmentation Using Bone Scintigraphy

  • Terapap Apiparakoon,
  • Nutthaphol Rakratchatakul,
  • Maythinee Chantadisai,
  • Usanee Vutrapongwatana,
  • Kanaungnit Kingpetch,
  • Sasitorn Sirisalipoch,
  • Yothin Rakvongthai,
  • Tawatchai Chaiwatanarat,
  • Ekapol Chuangsuwanich

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/ACCESS.2020.2971391
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8
pp. 27047 – 27066

Abstract

Read online

One challenge in applying deep learning to medical imaging is the lack of labeled data. Although large amounts of clinical data are available, acquiring labeled image data is difficult, especially for bone scintigraphy (i.e., 2D bone imaging) images. Bone scintigraphy images are generally noisy, and ground-truth or gold standard information from surgical or pathological reports may not be available. We propose a novel neural network model that can segment abnormal hotspots and classify bone cancer metastases in the chest area in a semisupervised manner. Our proposed model, called MaligNet, is an instance segmentation model that incorporates ladder networks to harness both labeled and unlabeled data. Unlike deep learning segmentation models that classify each instance independently, MaligNet utilizes global information via an additional connection from the core network. To evaluate the performance of our model, we created a dataset for bone lesion instance segmentation using labeled and unlabeled example data from 544 and 9,280 patients, respectively. Our proposed model achieved mean precision, mean sensitivity, and mean F1-score of 0.852, 0.856, and 0.848, respectively, and outperformed the baseline mask region-based convolutional neural network (Mask R-CNN) by 3.92%. Further analysis showed that incorporating global information also helps the model classify specific instances that require information from other regions. On the metastasis classification task, our model achieves a sensitivity of 0.657 and a specificity of 0.857, demonstrating its great potential for automated diagnosis using bone scintigraphy in clinical practice.

Keywords