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Malignant-lesion segmentation using 4D co-occurrence texture analysis applied to dynamic contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance breast image data

✍ Scribed by Brent J. Woods; Bradley D. Clymer; Tahsin Kurc; Johannes T. Heverhagen; Robert Stevens; Adem Orsdemir; Orhan Bulan; Michael V. Knopp


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
950 KB
Volume
25
Category
Article
ISSN
1053-1807

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Purpose

To investigate the use of four‐dimensional (4D) co‐occurrence‐based texture analysis to distinguish between nonmalignant and malignant tissues in dynamic contrast‐enhanced (DCE) MR images.

Materials and Methods

4D texture analysis was performed on DCE‐MRI data sets of breast lesions. A model‐free neural network‐based classification system assigned each voxel a “nonmalignant” or “malignant” label based on the textural features. The classification results were compared via receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis with the manual lesion segmentation produced by two radiologists (observers 1 and 2).

Results

The mean sensitivity and specificity of the classifier agreed with the mean observer 2 performance when compared with segmentations by observer 1 for a 95% confidence interval, using a two‐sided t‐test with α = 0.05. The results show that an area under the ROC curve (A~z~) of 0.99948, 0.99867, and 0.99957 can be achieved by comparing the classifier vs. observer 1, classifier vs. union of both observers, and classifier vs. intersection of both observers, respectively.

Conclusion

This study shows that a neural network classifier based on 4D texture analysis inputs can achieve a performance comparable to that achieved by human observers, and that further research in this area is warranted. J. Magn. Reson. Imaging 2007. © 2007 Wiley‐Liss, Inc.