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Deep learning referral suggestion and tumour discrimination using explainable artificial intelligence applied to multiparametric MRI

Authors
Shin, H | Park, JE | Jun, Y | Eo, T | Lee, J | Kim, JE | Lee, DH  | Moon, HH | Park, SI | Kim, S | Hwang, D | Kim, HS
Citation
European radiology, 33(8). : 5859-5870, 2023
Journal Title
European radiology
ISSN
0938-79941432-1084
Abstract
Objectives: An appropriate and fast clinical referral suggestion is important for intra-axial mass-like lesions (IMLLs) in the emergency setting. We aimed to apply an interpretable deep learning (DL) system to multiparametric MRI to obtain clinical referral suggestion for IMLLs, and to validate it in the setting of nontraumatic emergency neuroradiology. Methods: A DL system was developed in 747 patients with IMLLs ranging 30 diseases who underwent pre- and post-contrast T1-weighted (T1CE), FLAIR, and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). A DL system that segments IMLLs, classifies tumourous conditions, and suggests clinical referral among surgery, systematic work-up, medical treatment, and conservative treatment, was developed. The system was validated in an independent cohort of 130 emergency patients, and performance in referral suggestion and tumour discrimination was compared with that of radiologists using receiver operating characteristics curve, precision-recall curve analysis, and confusion matrices. Multiparametric interpretable visualisation of high-relevance regions from layer-wise relevance propagation overlaid on contrast-enhanced T1WI and DWI was analysed. Results: The DL system provided correct referral suggestions in 94 of 130 patients (72.3%) and performed comparably to radiologists (accuracy 72.6%, McNemar test; p =.942). For distinguishing tumours from non-tumourous conditions, the DL system (AUC, 0.90 and AUPRC, 0.94) performed similarly to human readers (AUC, 0.81~0.92, and AUPRC, 0.88~0.95). Solid portions of tumours showed a high overlap of relevance, but non-tumours did not (Dice coefficient 0.77 vs. 0.33, p <.001), demonstrating the DL’s decision. Conclusions: Our DL system could appropriately triage patients using multiparametric MRI and provide interpretability through multiparametric heatmaps, and may thereby aid neuroradiologic diagnoses in emergency settings. Clinical relevance statement: Our AI triages patients with raw MRI images to clinical referral pathways in brain intra-axial mass-like lesions. We demonstrate that the decision is based on the relative relevance between contrast-enhanced T1-weighted and diffusion-weighted images, providing explainability across multiparametric MRI data. Key Points: • A deep learning (DL) system using multiparametric MRI suggested clinical referral to patients with intra-axial mass-like lesions (IMLLs) similar to radiologists (accuracy 72.3% vs. 72.6%). • In the differentiation of tumourous and non-tumourous conditions, the DL system (AUC, 0.90) performed similar with radiologists (AUC, 0.81–0.92). • The DL’s decision basis for differentiating tumours from non-tumours can be quantified using multiparametric heatmaps obtained via the layer-wise relevance propagation method.
Keywords

MeSH

DOI
10.1007/s00330-023-09710-0
PMID
37150781
Appears in Collections:
Journal Papers > School of Medicine / Graduate School of Medicine > Radiology
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