Presentation + Paper
3 March 2017 Developing a radiomics framework for classifying non-small cell lung carcinoma subtypes
Dongdong Yu, Yali Zang, Di Dong, Mu Zhou, Olivier Gevaert, Mengjie Fang, Jingyun Shi, Jie Tian
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Patient-targeted treatment of non-small cell lung carcinoma (NSCLC) has been well documented according to the histologic subtypes over the past decade. In parallel, recent development of quantitative image biomarkers has recently been highlighted as important diagnostic tools to facilitate histological subtype classification. In this study, we present a radiomics analysis that classifies the adenocarcinoma (ADC) and squamous cell carcinoma (SqCC). We extract 52-dimensional, CT-based features (7 statistical features and 45 image texture features) to represent each nodule. We evaluate our approach on a clinical dataset including 324 ADCs and 110 SqCCs patients with CT image scans. Classification of these features is performed with four different machine-learning classifiers including Support Vector Machines with Radial Basis Function kernel (RBF-SVM), Random forest (RF), K-nearest neighbor (KNN), and RUSBoost algorithms. To improve the classifiers’ performance, optimal feature subset is selected from the original feature set by using an iterative forward inclusion and backward eliminating algorithm. Extensive experimental results demonstrate that radiomics features achieve encouraging classification results on both complete feature set (AUC=0.89) and optimal feature subset (AUC=0.91).
Conference Presentation
© (2017) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Dongdong Yu, Yali Zang, Di Dong, Mu Zhou, Olivier Gevaert, Mengjie Fang, Jingyun Shi, and Jie Tian "Developing a radiomics framework for classifying non-small cell lung carcinoma subtypes", Proc. SPIE 10134, Medical Imaging 2017: Computer-Aided Diagnosis, 1013426 (3 March 2017); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2253923
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Cited by 1 scholarly publication.
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KEYWORDS
Lung

Computed tomography

Image segmentation

Tumor growth modeling

Feature extraction

Lung cancer

Feature selection

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