Publication | Closed Access
ROC analysis of ultrasound tissue characterization classifiers for breast cancer diagnosis
72
Citations
14
References
2003
Year
Medical UltrasoundEngineeringDiagnosisPathologyThoracic UltrasoundSurgeryDiagnostic ImagingCancer DetectionPattern RecognitionUltrasound Tissue CharacterizationBreast ImagingBiostatisticsRoc AnalysisBreast Cancer DiagnosisRadiologyMedical ImagingComputational PathologyMusculoskeletal UltrasoundUltrasoundMedical Image ComputingRoc MethodologyBreast CancerComputer-aided DiagnosisClassifier SystemMedicine
Breast cancer diagnosis through ultrasound tissue characterization was studied using receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis of combinations of acoustic features, patient age, and radiological findings. A feature fusion method was devised that operates even if only partial diagnostic data are available. The ROC methodology uses ordinal dominance theory and bootstrap resampling to evaluate A(z) and confidence intervals in simple as well as paired data analyses. The combined diagnostic feature had an A(z) of 0.96 with a confidence interval of at a significance level of 0.05. The combined features show statistically significant improvement over prebiopsy radiological findings. These results indicate that ultrasound tissue characterization, in combination with patient record and clinical findings, may greatly reduce the need to perform biopsies of benign breast lesions.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1