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16 - 20 February 2025
San Diego, California, US
Conference 13407 > Paper 13407-103
Paper 13407-103

Longitudinal assessment of lung lesion burden in CT

19 February 2025 • 5:30 PM - 7:00 PM PST | Golden State Ballroom

Abstract

In the U.S., lung cancer is the second major cause of death. Early detection of suspicious lung nodules is crucial for patient treatment planning, management, and improving outcomes. Many approaches for lung nodule segmentation and volumetric analysis have been proposed, but few have looked at longitudinal changes in total lung tumor burden. In this work, we trained two 3D models (nnUNet) with and without anatomical priors to automatically segment lung lesions and quantified total lesion burden for each patient. The 3D model without priors significantly outperformed (p < .001) the model trained with anatomy priors. For detecting clinically significant lesions > 1cm, a precision of 71.3%, sensitivity of 68.4%, and F1-score of 69.8% was achieved. For segmentation, a Dice score of 77.1 +- 20.3 and Hausdorff distance error of 11.7 +- 24.1 mm was obtained. The median lesion burden was 6.4 cc (IQR: 2.1, 18.1) and the median volume difference between manual and automated measurements was 0.02 cc (IQR: -2.8, 1.2). Agreements were also evaluated with linear regression and Bland-Altman plots. The proposed approach can produce a personalized evaluation of the total tumor burden.

Presenter

National Institutes of Health (United States)
Application tracks: AI/ML
Presenter/Author
National Institutes of Health (United States)
Author
National Institutes of Health (United States)
Author
National Institutes of Health (United States)