Segment Like A Doctor: Learning reliable clinical thinking and experience for pancreas and pancreatic cancer segmentation.

Journal: Medical image analysis
PMID:

Abstract

Pancreatic cancer is a lethal invasive tumor with one of the worst prognosis. Accurate and reliable segmentation for pancreas and pancreatic cancer on computerized tomography (CT) images is vital in clinical diagnosis and treatment. Although certain deep learning-based techniques have been tentatively applied to this task, current performance of pancreatic cancer segmentation is far from meeting the clinical needs due to the tiny size, irregular shape and extremely uncertain boundary of the cancer. Besides, most of the existing studies are established on the black-box models which only learn the annotation distribution instead of the logical thinking and diagnostic experience of high-level medical experts, the latter is more credible and interpretable. To alleviate the above issues, we propose a novel Segment-Like-A-Doctor (SLAD) framework to learn the reliable clinical thinking and experience for pancreas and pancreatic cancer segmentation on CT images. Specifically, SLAD aims to simulate the essential logical thinking and experience of doctors in the progressive diagnostic stages of pancreatic cancer: organ, lesion and boundary stage. Firstly, in the organ stage, an Anatomy-aware Masked AutoEncoder (AMAE) is introduced to model the doctors' overall cognition for the anatomical distribution of abdominal organs on CT images by self-supervised pretraining. Secondly, in the lesion stage, a Causality-driven Graph Reasoning Module (CGRM) is designed to learn the global judgment of doctors for lesion detection by exploring topological feature difference between the causal lesion and the non-causal organ. Finally, in the boundary stage, a Diffusion-based Discrepancy Calibration Module (DDCM) is developed to fit the refined understanding of doctors for uncertain boundary of pancreatic cancer by inferring the ambiguous segmentation discrepancy based on the trustworthy lesion core. Experimental results on three independent datasets demonstrate that our approach boosts pancreatic cancer segmentation accuracy by 4%-9% compared with the state-of-the-art methods. Additionally, the tumor-vascular involvement analysis is also conducted to verify the superiority of our method in clinical applications. Our source codes will be publicly available at https://github.com/ZouLiwen-1999/SLAD.

Authors

  • Liwen Zou
    Department of Mathematics, Nanjing University, Nanjing, China.
  • Yingying Cao
    Department of Hepatology and Gastroenterology, The Third Central Clinical College of Tianjin Medical University, Tianjin 300170, China.
  • Ziwei Nie
    Department of Mathematics, Nanjing University, Nanjing, 210093, People's Republic of China.
  • Liang Mao
    Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area Artificial Intelligence Application Technology Research Institute, Shenzhen Polytechnic University, Shenzhen, China.
  • Yudong Qiu
    Department of Pancreatic Surgery, Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital, Nanjing, 210008, China.
  • Zhongqiu Wang
    Department of Radiology, Affiliated Hospital of Nanjing University of Chinese Medicine, Jiangsu province hospital of Chinese medicine, 155 Hanzhong Road, 210029, Nanjing, Jiangsu, China. zhq20010us@163.com.
  • Zhenghua Cai
    Department of Pancreatic Surgery, Nanjing Drum Tower Hospital, Nanjing, 210008, China; Medical School, Nanjing University, Nanjing, 210007, China. Electronic address: df21350003@smail.nju.edu.cn.
  • Xiaoping Yang
    School of Information, Renmin University of China, Beijing 100872, China.