Weakly supervised end-to-end artificial intelligence in gastrointestinal endoscopy.

Journal: Scientific reports
Published Date:

Abstract

Artificial intelligence (AI) is widely used to analyze gastrointestinal (GI) endoscopy image data. AI has led to several clinically approved algorithms for polyp detection, but application of AI beyond this specific task is limited by the high cost of manual annotations. Here, we show that a weakly supervised AI can be trained on data from a clinical routine database to learn visual patterns of GI diseases without any manual labeling or annotation. We trained a deep neural network on a dataset of N = 29,506 gastroscopy and N = 18,942 colonoscopy examinations from a large endoscopy unit serving patients in Germany, the Netherlands and Belgium, using only routine diagnosis data for the 42 most common diseases. Despite a high data heterogeneity, the AI system reached a high performance for diagnosis of multiple diseases, including inflammatory, degenerative, infectious and neoplastic diseases. Specifically, a cross-validated area under the receiver operating curve (AUROC) of above 0.70 was reached for 13 diseases, and an AUROC of above 0.80 was reached for two diseases in the primary data set. In an external validation set including six disease categories, the AI system was able to significantly predict the presence of diverticulosis, candidiasis, colon and rectal cancer with AUROCs above 0.76. Reverse engineering the predictions demonstrated that plausible patterns were learned on the level of images and within images and potential confounders were identified. In summary, our study demonstrates the potential of weakly supervised AI to generate high-performing classifiers and identify clinically relevant visual patterns based on non-annotated routine image data in GI endoscopy and potentially other clinical imaging modalities.

Authors

  • Lukas Buendgens
    Department of Medicine III, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Pauwelsstrasse 30, 52074, Aachen, Germany.
  • Didem Cifci
    Department of Medicine III, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Pauwelsstrasse 30, 52074, Aachen, Germany.
  • Narmin Ghaffari Laleh
    Department of Medicine III, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
  • Marko van Treeck
    Department of Medicine III, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
  • Maria T Koenen
    Department of Medicine III, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Pauwelsstrasse 30, 52074, Aachen, Germany.
  • Henning W Zimmermann
    Department of Medicine III, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Pauwelsstrasse 30, 52074, Aachen, Germany.
  • Till Herbold
    Department of Visceral Surgery and Transplantation, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
  • Thomas Joachim Lux
    Interventional and Experimental Endoscopy (InExEn), Internal Medicine II, University Hospital Würzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
  • Alexander Hann
    Department of Internal Medicine II, Interventional and Experimental Endoscopy (InExEn), University Hospital Wuerzburg, Würzburg, Germany.
  • Christian Trautwein
    Department of Medicine III, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany.
  • Jakob Nikolas Kather
    Department of Medicine III, University Hospital RWTH Aachen, Aachen, Germany.