In Patterns (New York, N.Y.)
Topological data analysis provides tools to capture wide-scale structural shape information in data. Its main method, persistent homology, has found successful applications to various machine-learning problems. Despite its recent gain in popularity, much of its potential for medical image analysis remains undiscovered. We explore the prominent learning problems on thoracic radiographic images of lung tumors for which persistent homology improves radiomic-based learning. It turns out that our topological features well capture complementary information important for benign versus malignant and adenocarcinoma versus squamous cell carcinoma tumor prediction while contributing less consistently to small cell versus non-small cell-an interesting result in its own right. Furthermore, while radiomic features are better for predicting malignancy scores assigned by expert radiologists through visual inspection, we find that topological features are better for predicting more accurate histology assessed through long-term radiology review, biopsy, surgical resection, progression, or response.
Vandaele Robin, Mukherjee Pritam, Selby Heather Marie, Shah Rajesh Pravin, Gevaert Olivier
2023-Jan-13
computed tomography, computer vision, feature engineering, histology, radiology, supervised learning, topological data analysis