The objective of the study was to determine if the pathology depicted on a mammogram is either benign or malignant (ductal or non-ductal carcinoma) using deep learning and artificial intelligence… Click to show full abstract
The objective of the study was to determine if the pathology depicted on a mammogram is either benign or malignant (ductal or non-ductal carcinoma) using deep learning and artificial intelligence techniques. A total of 559 patients underwent breast ultrasound, mammography, and ultrasound-guided breast biopsy. Based on the histopathological results, the patients were divided into three categories: benign, ductal carcinomas, and non-ductal carcinomas. The mammograms in the cranio-caudal view underwent pre-processing and segmentation. Given the large variability of the areola, an algorithm was used to remove it and the adjacent skin. Therefore, patients with breast lesions close to the skin were removed. The remaining breast image was resized on the Y axis to a square image and then resized to 512 × 512 pixels. A variable square of 322,622 pixels was searched inside every image to identify the lesion. Each image was rotated with no information loss. For data augmentation, each image was rotated 360 times and a crop of 227 × 227 pixels was saved, resulting in a total of 201,240 images. The reason why our images were cropped at this size is because the deep learning algorithm transfer learning used from AlexNet network has an input image size of 227 × 227. The mean accuracy was 95.8344% ± 6.3720% and mean AUC 0.9910% ± 0.0366%, computed on 100 runs of the algorithm. Based on the results, the proposed solution can be used as a non-invasive and highly accurate computer-aided system based on deep learning that can classify breast lesions based on changes identified on mammograms in the cranio-caudal view.
               
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