SLIViT: a general AI framework for clinical-feature diagnosis from limited 3D biomedical-imaging data

We present SLIViT, a deep-learning framework that accurately measures disease-related risk factors in volumetric biomedical imaging, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans, and ultrasound videos. To evaluate SLIViT, we applied it to five different da...

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Main Authors Avram, Oren, Durmus, Berkin, Rakocz, Nadav, Corradetti, Giulia, An, Ulzee, Nitalla, Muneeswar G, Rudas, Akos, Wakatsuki, Yu, Hirabayashi, Kazutaka, Velaga, Swetha, Tiosano, Liran, Corvi, Federico, Verma, Aditya, Karamat, Ayesha, Lindenberg, Sophiana, Oncel, Deniz, Almidani, Louay, Hull, Victoria, Fasih-Ahmad, Sohaib, Esmaeilkhanian, Houri, Wykoff, Charles C, Rahmani, Elior, Arnold, Corey W, Zhou, Bolei, Zaitlen, Noah, Gronau, Ilan, Sankararaman, Sriram, Chiang, Jeffrey N, Sadda, Srinivas R, Halperin, Eran
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 21.11.2023
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Summary:We present SLIViT, a deep-learning framework that accurately measures disease-related risk factors in volumetric biomedical imaging, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, optical coherence tomography (OCT) scans, and ultrasound videos. To evaluate SLIViT, we applied it to five different datasets of these three different data modalities tackling seven learning tasks (including both classification and regression) and found that it consistently and significantly outperforms domain-specific state-of-the-art models, typically improving performance (ROC AUC or correlation) by 0.1-0.4. Notably, compared to existing approaches, SLIViT can be applied even when only a small number of annotated training samples is available, which is often a constraint in medical applications. When trained on less than 700 annotated volumes, SLIViT obtained accuracy comparable to trained clinical specialists while reducing annotation time by a factor of 5,000 demonstrating its utility to automate and expedite ongoing research and other practical clinical scenarios.