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A new automated quantification algorithm for the detection and evaluation of focal liver lesions with contrast‐enhanced ultrasound
Author(s) -
Gatos Ilias,
Tsantis Stavros,
Spiliopoulos Stavros,
Skouroliakou Aikaterini,
Theotokas Ioannis,
Zoumpoulis Pavlos,
Hazle John D.,
Kagadis George C.
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.4921753
Subject(s) - initialization , artificial intelligence , contrast enhanced ultrasound , segmentation , support vector machine , computer science , algorithm , image segmentation , radiology , pattern recognition (psychology) , contrast (vision) , medicine , ultrasound , programming language
Purpose: Detect and classify focal liver lesions (FLLs) from contrast‐enhanced ultrasound (CEUS) imaging by means of an automated quantification algorithm. Methods: The proposed algorithm employs a sophisticated segmentation method to detect and contour focal lesions from 52 CEUS video sequences (30 benign and 22 malignant). Lesion detection involves wavelet transform zero crossings utilization as an initialization step to the Markov random field model toward the lesion contour extraction. After FLL detection across frames, time intensity curve (TIC) is computed which provides the contrast agents’ behavior at all vascular phases with respect to adjacent parenchyma for each patient. From each TIC, eight features were automatically calculated and employed into the support vector machines (SVMs) classification algorithm in the design of the image analysis model. Results: With regard to FLLs detection accuracy, all lesions detected had an average overlap value of 0.89 ± 0.16 with manual segmentations for all CEUS frame‐subsets included in the study. Highest classification accuracy from the SVM model was 90.3%, misdiagnosing three benign and two malignant FLLs with sensitivity and specificity values of 93.1% and 86.9%, respectively. Conclusions: The proposed quantification system that employs FLLs detection and classification algorithms may be of value to physicians as a second opinion tool for avoiding unnecessary invasive procedures.