Automated Lung Cancer Diagnosis Applying Butterworth Filtering, Bi-Level Feature Extraction, and Sparce Convolutional Neural Network to Luna 16 CT Images
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Published:2024-07-15
Issue:7
Volume:10
Page:168
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ISSN:2313-433X
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Container-title:Journal of Imaging
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J. Imaging
Author:
Gharaibeh Nasr Y.1, De Fazio Roberto2ORCID, Al-Naami Bassam3ORCID, Al-Hinnawi Abdel-Razzak4ORCID, Visconti Paolo2ORCID
Affiliation:
1. Department of Electrical Engineering, Al-Balqa Applied University, Salt 21163, Jordan 2. Department of Innovation Engineering, University of Salento, 73100 Lecce, Italy 3. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, The Hashemite University, Zarqa 13133, Jordan 4. Department of Medical Imaging, Faculty of Allied Medical Sciences, Isra University, Amman 11622, Jordan
Abstract
Accurate prognosis and diagnosis are crucial for selecting and planning lung cancer treatments. As a result of the rapid development of medical imaging technology, the use of computed tomography (CT) scans in pathology is becoming standard practice. An intricate interplay of requirements and obstacles characterizes computer-assisted diagnosis, which relies on the precise and effective analysis of pathology images. In recent years, pathology image analysis tasks such as tumor region identification, prognosis prediction, tumor microenvironment characterization, and metastasis detection have witnessed the considerable potential of artificial intelligence, especially deep learning techniques. In this context, an artificial intelligence (AI)-based methodology for lung cancer diagnosis is proposed in this research work. As a first processing step, filtering using the Butterworth smooth filter algorithm was applied to the input images from the LUNA 16 lung cancer dataset to remove noise without significantly degrading the image quality. Next, we performed the bi-level feature selection step using the Chaotic Crow Search Algorithm and Random Forest (CCSA-RF) approach to select features such as diameter, margin, spiculation, lobulation, subtlety, and malignancy. Next, the Feature Extraction step was performed using the Multi-space Image Reconstruction (MIR) method with Grey Level Co-occurrence Matrix (GLCM). Next, the Lung Tumor Severity Classification (LTSC) was implemented by using the Sparse Convolutional Neural Network (SCNN) approach with a Probabilistic Neural Network (PNN). The developed method can detect benign, normal, and malignant lung cancer images using the PNN algorithm, which reduces complexity and efficiently provides classification results. Performance parameters, namely accuracy, precision, F-score, sensitivity, and specificity, were determined to evaluate the effectiveness of the implemented hybrid method and compare it with other solutions already present in the literature.
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