Diverse Image Generation with Diffusion Models and Cross Class Label Learning for Polyp Classification
Journal:
arXiv
Published Date:
Feb 8, 2025
Abstract
Pathologic diagnosis is a critical phase in deciding the optimal treatment
procedure for dealing with colorectal cancer (CRC). Colonic polyps, precursors
to CRC, can pathologically be classified into two major types: adenomatous and
hyperplastic. For precise classification and early diagnosis of such polyps,
the medical procedure of colonoscopy has been widely adopted paired with
various imaging techniques, including narrow band imaging and white light
imaging. However, the existing classification techniques mainly rely on a
single imaging modality and show limited performance due to data scarcity.
Recently, generative artificial intelligence has been gaining prominence in
overcoming such issues. Additionally, various generation-controlling mechanisms
using text prompts and images have been introduced to obtain visually appealing
and desired outcomes. However, such mechanisms require class labels to make the
model respond efficiently to the provided control input. In the colonoscopy
domain, such controlling mechanisms are rarely explored; specifically, the text
prompt is a completely uninvestigated area. Moreover, the unavailability of
expensive class-wise labels for diverse sets of images limits such
explorations. Therefore, we develop a novel model, PathoPolyp-Diff, that
generates text-controlled synthetic images with diverse characteristics in
terms of pathology, imaging modalities, and quality. We introduce cross-class
label learning to make the model learn features from other classes, reducing
the burdensome task of data annotation. The experimental results report an
improvement of up to 7.91% in balanced accuracy using a publicly available
dataset. Moreover, cross-class label learning achieves a statistically
significant improvement of up to 18.33% in balanced accuracy during video-level
analysis. The code is available at https://github.com/Vanshali/PathoPolyp-Diff.