Scientific Reports (Mar 2023)

Differentiating malignant and benign eyelid lesions using deep learning

  • Min Joung Lee,
  • Min Kyu Yang,
  • Sang In Khwarg,
  • Eun Kyu Oh,
  • Youn Joo Choi,
  • Namju Kim,
  • Hokyung Choung,
  • Chang Won Seo,
  • Yun Jong Ha,
  • Min Ho Cho,
  • Bum-Joo Cho

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-30699-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 8

Abstract

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Abstract Artificial intelligence as a screening tool for eyelid lesions will be helpful for early diagnosis of eyelid malignancies and proper decision-making. This study aimed to evaluate the performance of a deep learning model in differentiating eyelid lesions using clinical eyelid photographs in comparison with human ophthalmologists. We included 4954 photographs from 928 patients in this retrospective cross-sectional study. Images were classified into three categories: malignant lesion, benign lesion, and no lesion. Two pre-trained convolutional neural network (CNN) models, DenseNet-161 and EfficientNetV2-M architectures, were fine-tuned to classify images into three or two (malignant versus benign) categories. For a ternary classification, the mean diagnostic accuracies of the CNNs were 82.1% and 83.0% using DenseNet-161 and EfficientNetV2-M, respectively, which were inferior to those of the nine clinicians (87.0–89.5%). For the binary classification, the mean accuracies were 87.5% and 92.5% using DenseNet-161 and EfficientNetV2-M models, which was similar to that of the clinicians (85.8–90.0%). The mean AUC of the two CNN models was 0.908 and 0.950, respectively. Gradient-weighted class activation map successfully highlighted the eyelid tumors on clinical photographs. Deep learning models showed a promising performance in discriminating malignant versus benign eyelid lesions on clinical photographs, reaching the level of human observers.