Frontiers in Medicine (Jul 2024)

A robust ensemble deep learning framework for accurate diagnoses of tuberculosis from chest radiographs

  • Xin Sun,
  • Xin Sun,
  • Xin Sun,
  • Zhiheng Xing,
  • Zhen Wan,
  • Wenlong Ding,
  • Li Wang,
  • Lingshan Zhong,
  • Xinran Zhou,
  • Xiu-Jun Gong,
  • Yonghui Li,
  • Xiao-Dong Zhang,
  • Xiao-Dong Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fmed.2024.1391184
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

Read online

IntroductionTuberculosis (TB) stands as a paramount global health concern, contributing significantly to worldwide mortality rates. Effective containment of TB requires deployment of cost-efficient screening method with limited resources. To enhance the precision of resource allocation in the global fight against TB, this research proposed chest X-ray radiography (CXR) based machine learning screening algorithms with optimization, benchmarking and tuning for the best TB subclassification tasks for clinical application.MethodsThis investigation delves into the development and evaluation of a robust ensemble deep learning framework, comprising 43 distinct models, tailored for the identification of active TB cases and the categorization of their clinical subtypes. The proposed framework is essentially an ensemble model with multiple feature extractors and one of three fusion strategies-voting, attention-based, or concatenation methods-in the fusion stage before a final classification. The comprised de-identified dataset contains records of 915 active TB patients alongside 1,276 healthy controls with subtype-specific information. Thus, the realizations of our framework are capable for diagnosis with subclass identification. The subclass tags include: secondary tuberculosis/tuberculous pleurisy; non-cavity/cavity; secondary tuberculosis only/secondary tuberculosis and tuberculous pleurisy; tuberculous pleurisy only/secondary tuberculosis and tuberculous pleurisy.ResultsBased on the dataset and model selection and tuning, ensemble models show their capability with self-correction capability of subclass identification with rendering robust clinical predictions. The best double-CNN-extractor model with concatenation/attention fusion strategies may potentially be the successful model for subclass tasks in real application. With visualization techniques, in-depth analysis of the ensemble model's performance across different fusion strategies are verified.DiscussionThe findings underscore the potential of such ensemble approaches in augmenting TB diagnostics with subclassification. Even with limited dataset, the self-correction within the ensemble models still guarantees the accuracies to some level for potential clinical decision-making processes in TB management. Ultimately, this study shows a direction for better TB screening in the future TB response strategy.

Keywords