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  • Development and Validation ...
    Hwang, Eui Jin; Park, Sunggyun; Jin, Kwang-Nam; Kim, Jung Im; Choi, So Young; Lee, Jong Hyuk; Goo, Jin Mo; Aum, Jaehong; Yim, Jae-Joon; Park, Chang Min

    Clinical infectious diseases, 08/2019, Volume: 69, Issue: 5
    Journal Article

    Abstract Background Detection of active pulmonary tuberculosis on chest radiographs (CRs) is critical for the diagnosis and screening of tuberculosis. An automated system may help streamline the tuberculosis screening process and improve diagnostic performance. Methods We developed a deep learning–based automatic detection (DLAD) algorithm using 54c221 normal CRs and 6768 CRs with active pulmonary tuberculosis that were labeled and annotated by 13 board-certified radiologists. The performance of DLAD was validated using 6 external multicenter, multinational datasets. To compare the performances of DLAD with physicians, an observer performance test was conducted by 15 physicians including nonradiology physicians, board-certified radiologists, and thoracic radiologists. Image-wise classification and lesion-wise localization performances were measured using area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves and area under the alternative free-response ROC curves, respectively. Sensitivities and specificities of DLAD were calculated using 2 cutoffs (high sensitivity 98% and high specificity 98%) obtained through in-house validation. Results DLAD demonstrated classification performance of 0.977–1.000 and localization performance of 0.973–1.000. Sensitivities and specificities for classification were 94.3%–100% and 91.1%–100% using the high-sensitivity cutoff and 84.1%–99.0% and 99.1%–100% using the high-specificity cutoff. DLAD showed significantly higher performance in both classification (0.993 vs 0.746–0.971) and localization (0.993 vs 0.664–0.925) compared to all groups of physicians. Conclusions Our DLAD demonstrated excellent and consistent performance in the detection of active pulmonary tuberculosis on CR, outperforming physicians, including thoracic radiologists. A deep learning–based algorithm outperformed radiologists in detecting active pulmonary tuberculosis on chest radiographs and thus may play an important role in diagnosis and screening of tuberculosis in select situations, contributing to the reduction of the high burden of tuberculosis worldwide.