Automatic detection on intracranial aneurysm from digital subtraction angiography with cascade convolutional neural networks

An intracranial aneurysm is a cerebrovascular disorder that can result in various diseases. Clinically, diagnosis of an intracranial aneurysm utilizes digital subtraction angiography (DSA) modality as gold standard. The existing automatic computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) research studies with DSA moda...

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Published inBiomedical engineering online Vol. 18; no. 1; pp. 110 - 18
Main Authors Duan, Haihan, Huang, Yunzhi, Liu, Lunxin, Dai, Huming, Chen, Liangyin, Zhou, Liangxue
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England BioMed Central Ltd 14.11.2019
BioMed Central
BMC
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Summary:An intracranial aneurysm is a cerebrovascular disorder that can result in various diseases. Clinically, diagnosis of an intracranial aneurysm utilizes digital subtraction angiography (DSA) modality as gold standard. The existing automatic computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) research studies with DSA modality were based on classical digital image processing (DIP) methods. However, the classical feature extraction methods were badly hampered by complex vascular distribution, and the sliding window methods were time-consuming during searching and feature extraction. Therefore, developing an accurate and efficient CAD method to detect intracranial aneurysms on DSA images is a meaningful task. In this study, we proposed a two-stage convolutional neural network (CNN) architecture to automatically detect intracranial aneurysms on 2D-DSA images. In region localization stage (RLS), our detection system can locate a specific region to reduce the interference of the other regions. Then, in aneurysm detection stage (ADS), the detector could combine the information of frontal and lateral angiographic view to identify intracranial aneurysms, with a false-positive suppression algorithm. Our study was experimented on posterior communicating artery (PCoA) region of internal carotid artery (ICA). The data set contained 241 subjects for model training, and 40 prospectively collected subjects for testing. Compared with the classical DIP method which had an accuracy of 62.5% and an area under curve (AUC) of 0.69, the proposed architecture could achieve accuracy of 93.5% and the AUC of 0.942. In addition, the detection time cost of our method was about 0.569 s, which was one hundred times faster than the classical DIP method of 62.546 s. The results illustrated that our proposed two-stage CNN-based architecture was more accurate and faster compared with the existing research studies of classical DIP methods. Overall, our study is a demonstration that it is feasible to assist physicians to detect intracranial aneurysm on DSA images using CNN.
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ISSN:1475-925X
1475-925X
DOI:10.1186/s12938-019-0726-2