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Short-Term Lesion Change Detection for Melanoma Screening With Novel Siamese Neural Network

Boyan Zhang, Zhiyong Wang, Junbin Gao, Chantal Rutjes, Kaitlin L. Nufer, Dacheng Tao, Dagan Feng, Scott W. Menzies

2020IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging44 citationsDOI

Abstract

Short-term monitoring of lesion changes has been a widely accepted clinical guideline for melanoma screening. When there is a significant change of a melanocytic lesion at three months, the lesion will be excised to exclude melanoma. However, the decision on change or no-change heavily depends on the experience and bias of individual clinicians, which is subjective. For the first time, a novel deep learning based method is developed in this paper for automatically detecting short-term lesion changes in melanoma screening. The lesion change detection is formulated as a task measuring the similarity between two dermoscopy images taken for a lesion in a short time-frame, and a novel Siamese structure based deep network is proposed to produce the decision: changed (i.e. not similar) or unchanged (i.e. similar enough). Under the Siamese framework, a novel structure, namely Tensorial Regression Process, is proposed to extract the global features of lesion images, in addition to deep convolutional features. In order to mimic the decision-making process of clinicians who often focus more on regions with specific patterns when comparing a pair of lesion images, a segmentation loss (SegLoss) is further devised and incorporated into the proposed network as a regularization term. To evaluate the proposed method, an in-house dataset with 1,000 pairs of lesion images taken in a short time-frame at a clinical melanoma centre was established. Experimental results on this first-of-a-kind large dataset indicate that the proposed model is promising in detecting the short-term lesion change for objective melanoma screening.

Topics & Concepts

LesionArtificial intelligenceConvolutional neural networkComputer scienceDeep learningPattern recognition (psychology)SegmentationMelanomaMedicinePathologyCancer researchCutaneous Melanoma Detection and ManagementAI in cancer detectionInfrared Thermography in Medicine