Company or Institution
Medical Imaging and Diagnostics lab, NCAI
Industry
Health
Website
Country
Pakistan
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
SDG 3: Good Health and Well-being
General description of the AI solution
We have developed an AI-based DICOM viewer that helps radiologists analyse and diagnose breast cancer, brain cancer, and tuberculosis in mammogram, chest X-ray, and brain MRI images, respectively, with the help of deep learning models. The diagnosis is in the form of detection and segmentation of the DICOM images.
The DICOM viewer for mammograms locates the lesion, categorises it as benign, malignant, or normal, and also rates the breast density according to the BI-RADS assessment score. For Brain Tumour detection, our AI model in the DICOM viewer segments the tumour region into four common types of tumours and also predicts the survival days on the basis of the severity of the tumour. And lastly, for the chest X-rays, DICOM viewer diagnoses whether the patient's lungs are normal, sick with other diseases, or if s/he has tuberculosis.
Why an AI-based DICOM viewer?
According to the research, radiologists’ accuracy in evaluating radiology images lies between 50 and 70 percent. It has also been observed that different radiologists' reports on the same image contain different findings. In this case, a 2nd and highly accurate opinion is crucial for proper diagnosis and treatment.
Radiology report writing is another hectic task. Our DICOM viewer can generate radiology reports automatically without requiring extra effort. The report contains the details of the patient, the disease report, the radiologist's opinion or suggestions, and the patient’s radiology image with marked disease parts.
Our DICOM viewer will save radiologists' time and assist them in analyzing images in less time. Also, a second opinion from our DICOM viewer will help them in taking decisions for each case and will make them more confident. Eventually, a large number of patients can be diagnosed each day as compared to manual diagnosis.
Publications
Usman, M., Zia, T., & Tariq, A. (2022). Analyzing Transfer Learning of Vision Transformers for Interpreting Chest Radiography. Journal of digital imaging, 1-18.
Zia, T., Murtaza, S., Bashir, N., Windridge, D., & Nisar, Z. (2022). VANT-GAN: adversarial learning for discrepancy-based visual attribution in medical imaging. Pattern Recognition Letters, 156, 112-118.
Nawaz, M., Al-Obeidat, F., Tubaishat, A., Zia, T., Maqbool, F., & Rocha, A. (2022). MDVA-GAN: multi-domain visual attribution generative adversarial networks. Neural Computing and Applications, 1-16.
Fiaz, K., Madni, T. M., Anwar, F., Janjua, U. I., Rafi, A., Abid, M. M. N., & Sultana, N. (2022). Brain tumor segmentation and multiview multiscale‐based radiomic model for patient's overall survival prediction. International Journal of Imaging Systems and Technology, 32(3), 982-999.
Fatima, A., Madni, T. M., Anwar, F., Janjua, U. I., & Sultana, N. (2022). Automated 2D Slice-Based Skull Stripping Multi-View Ensemble Model on NFBS and IBSR Datasets. Journal of Digital Imaging, 35(2), 374-384.
Needs
Public Exposure
HPC resources and/or Cloud Computing Services