利用元学习推广基于智能手机的角膜炎筛查:一项多中心研究。

IF 4 2区 医学 Q2 COMPUTER SCIENCE, INTERDISCIPLINARY APPLICATIONS
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:角膜炎是全球角膜失明的主要原因。及时发现和转诊角膜炎患者是改善患者预后的基本措施。虽然深度学习可以帮助眼科医生通过裂隙灯相机自动检测角膜炎,但偏远地区和服务不足的地区往往缺乏这种专业设备。智能手机作为一种广泛使用的设备,最近被发现在角膜炎筛查方面具有潜力。然而,由于智能手机提供的数据有限,采用传统的深度学习算法来构建一个强大的智能系统是一个巨大的挑战。本研究旨在提出一种元学习框架--基于余弦最近中心点的度量学习(CNCML),通过利用从裂隙灯照片中获取的先验知识,在智能手机数据不足的情况下开发基于智能手机的角膜炎筛查模型:我们根据从 3 个独立临床中心获得的 13,009 张裂隙灯照片和 4,075 张智能手机照片开发并评估了 CNCML。为了模拟真实世界中不同程度的样本稀缺情况,我们使用 HUAWEI 智能手机中不同大小的训练集(每类 0 到 20 张照片)来训练 CNCML。我们不仅在内部测试数据集上评估了 CNCML 的性能,还在两个外部数据集上评估了 CNCML 的性能,这两个外部数据集是由另一个临床中心的两个不同品牌的智能手机(VIVO 和 XIAOMI)收集的。此外,我们还比较了 CNCML 与传统深度学习模型在这些智能手机数据集上的表现。我们利用准确率和宏观平均曲线下面积(macro-AUC)来评估模型的性能:在每个类别仅使用 15 张智能手机照片进行训练的情况下,CNCML 在三个智能手机数据集上的准确率分别达到 84.59%、83.15% 和 89.99%,相应的宏观平均曲线下面积(macro-AUC)分别为 0.96、0.95 和 0.98。CNCML 在这些数据集上的准确率比最具竞争力的传统深度学习模型高出 0.56% 至 9.65%:CNCML 展示了快速学习能力,只需少量训练样本就能获得出色的性能。这种方法为将智能角膜炎检测从专业设备(如裂隙灯照相机)过渡到更普及的设备(如智能手机)提供了一种潜在的解决方案,使角膜炎筛查更加方便有效。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Promoting smartphone-based keratitis screening using meta-learning: A multicenter study

Promoting smartphone-based keratitis screening using meta-learning: A multicenter study

Objective

Keratitis is the primary cause of corneal blindness worldwide. Prompt identification and referral of patients with keratitis are fundamental measures to improve patient prognosis. Although deep learning can assist ophthalmologists in automatically detecting keratitis through a slit lamp camera, remote and underserved areas often lack this professional equipment. Smartphones, a widely available device, have recently been found to have potential in keratitis screening. However, given the limited data available from smartphones, employing traditional deep learning algorithms to construct a robust intelligent system presents a significant challenge. This study aimed to propose a meta-learning framework, cosine nearest centroid-based metric learning (CNCML), for developing a smartphone-based keratitis screening model in the case of insufficient smartphone data by leveraging the prior knowledge acquired from slit-lamp photographs.

Methods

We developed and assessed CNCML based on 13,009 slit-lamp photographs and 4,075 smartphone photographs that were obtained from 3 independent clinical centers. To mimic real-world scenarios with various degrees of sample scarcity, we used training sets of different sizes (0 to 20 photographs per class) from the HUAWEI smartphone to train CNCML. We evaluated the performance of CNCML not only on an internal test dataset but also on two external datasets that were collected by two different brands of smartphones (VIVO and XIAOMI) in another clinical center. Furthermore, we compared the performance of CNCML with that of traditional deep learning models on these smartphone datasets. The accuracy and macro-average area under the curve (macro-AUC) were utilized to evaluate the performance of models.

Results

With merely 15 smartphone photographs per class used for training, CNCML reached accuracies of 84.59%, 83.15%, and 89.99% on three smartphone datasets, with corresponding macro-AUCs of 0.96, 0.95, and 0.98, respectively. The accuracies of CNCML on these datasets were 0.56% to 9.65% higher than those of the most competitive traditional deep learning models.

Conclusions

CNCML exhibited fast learning capabilities, attaining remarkable performance with a small number of training samples. This approach presents a potential solution for transitioning intelligent keratitis detection from professional devices (e.g., slit-lamp cameras) to more ubiquitous devices (e.g., smartphones), making keratitis screening more convenient and effective.

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来源期刊
Journal of Biomedical Informatics
Journal of Biomedical Informatics 医学-计算机:跨学科应用
CiteScore
8.90
自引率
6.70%
发文量
243
审稿时长
32 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Biomedical Informatics reflects a commitment to high-quality original research papers, reviews, and commentaries in the area of biomedical informatics methodology. Although we publish articles motivated by applications in the biomedical sciences (for example, clinical medicine, health care, population health, and translational bioinformatics), the journal emphasizes reports of new methodologies and techniques that have general applicability and that form the basis for the evolving science of biomedical informatics. Articles on medical devices; evaluations of implemented systems (including clinical trials of information technologies); or papers that provide insight into a biological process, a specific disease, or treatment options would generally be more suitable for publication in other venues. Papers on applications of signal processing and image analysis are often more suitable for biomedical engineering journals or other informatics journals, although we do publish papers that emphasize the information management and knowledge representation/modeling issues that arise in the storage and use of biological signals and images. System descriptions are welcome if they illustrate and substantiate the underlying methodology that is the principal focus of the report and an effort is made to address the generalizability and/or range of application of that methodology. Note also that, given the international nature of JBI, papers that deal with specific languages other than English, or with country-specific health systems or approaches, are acceptable for JBI only if they offer generalizable lessons that are relevant to the broad JBI readership, regardless of their country, language, culture, or health system.
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