Monday, June 3, 2019

Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

Combining clustering and classification ensembles: A novel pipeline to identify breast cancer profiles

Publication date: June 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Volume 97

Author(s): Utkarsh Agrawal, Daniele Soria, Christian Wagner, Jonathan Garibaldi, Ian O. Ellis, John M.S. Bartlett, David Cameron, Emad A. Rakha, Andrew R. Green

Abstract

Breast Cancer is one of the most common causes of cancer death in women, representing a very complex disease with varied molecular alterations. To assist breast cancer prognosis, the classification of patients into biological groups is of great significance for treatment strategies. Recent studies have used an ensemble of multiple clustering algorithms to elucidate the most characteristic biological groups of breast cancer. However, the combination of various clustering methods resulted in a number of patients remaining unclustered. Therefore, a framework still needs to be developed which can assign as many unclustered (i.e. biologically diverse) patients to one of the identified groups in order to improve classification. Therefore, in this paper we develop a novel classification framework which introduces a new ensemble classification stage after the ensemble clustering stage to target the unclustered patients. Thus, a step-by-step pipeline is introduced which couples ensemble clustering with ensemble classification for the identification of core groups, data distribution in them and improvement in final classification results by targeting the unclustered data. The proposed pipeline is employed on a novel real world breast cancer dataset and subsequently its robustness and stability are examined by testing it on standard datasets. The results show that by using the presented framework, an improved classification is obtained. Finally, the results have been verified using statistical tests, visualisation techniques, cluster quality assessment and interpretation from clinical experts.



Recurrent neural networks with segment attention and entity description for relation extraction from clinical texts

Publication date: June 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Volume 97

Author(s): Zhi Li, Jinshan Yang, Xu Gou, Xiaorong Qi

Abstract

At present, great progress has been achieved on the relation extraction for clinical texts, but we have noticed that the current models have great drawbacks when dealing with long sentences and multiple entities in a sentence. In this paper, we propose a novel neural network architecture based on Bidirectional Long Short-Term Memory Networks for relation classification. Firstly, we utilize a concat-attention mechanism for capturing the most important context words for relation extraction in a sentence. In addition, a segment attention mechanism is proposed to improve the performance of the model processing long sentences. Finally, a tensor-based entity description is used to overcome the performance degradation of the model when there are multiple entities in a sentence. The performance of the proposed model is evaluated on a part of the i2b2-2010 shared task clinical relation extraction dataset. The result indicates that our model can effectively overcome the above two problems and improve the F1-score by approximately 3% compared with baseline model.



Incorporated region detection and classification using deep convolutional networks for bone age assessment

Publication date: June 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Volume 97

Author(s): Toan Duc Bui, Jae-Joon Lee, Jitae Shin

Abstract

Bone age assessment plays an important role in the endocrinology and genetic investigation of patients. In this paper, we proposed a deep learning-based approach for bone age assessment by integration of the Tanner-Whitehouse (TW3) methods and deep convolution networks based on extracted regions of interest (ROI)-detection and classification using Faster-RCNN and Inception-v4 networks, respectively. The proposed method allows exploration of expert knowledge from TW3 and features engineering from deep convolution networks to enhance the accuracy of bone age assessment. The experimental results showed a mean absolute error of about 0.59 years between expert radiologists and the proposed method, which is the best performance among state-of-the-art methods.



Texture descriptors and voxels for the early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease

Publication date: June 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Volume 97

Author(s): Loris Nanni, Sheryl Brahnam, Christian Salvatore, Isabella Castiglioni, the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative

Abstract
Background and objective

Early and accurate diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is critical since early treatment effectively slows the progression of the disease thereby adding productive years to those afflicted by this disease. A major problem encountered in the classification of MRI for the automatic diagnosis of AD is the so-called curse-of-dimensionality, which is a consequence of the high dimensionality of MRI feature vectors and the low number of training patterns available in most MRI datasets relevant to AD.

Methods

A method for performing early diagnosis of AD is proposed that combines a set of SVMs trained on different texture descriptors (which reduce dimensionality) extracted from slices of Magnetic Resonance Image (MRI) with a set of SVMs trained on markers built from the voxels of MRIs. The dimension of the voxel-based features is reduced by using different feature selection algorithms, each of which trains a separate SVM. These two sets of SVMs are then combined by weighted-sum rule for a final decision.

Results

Experimental results show that 2D texture descriptors improve the performance of state-of-the-art voxel-based methods. The evaluation of our system on the four ADNI datasets demonstrates the efficacy of the proposed ensemble and demonstrates a contribution to the accurate prediction of AD.

Conclusions

Ensembles of texture descriptors combine partially uncorrelated information with respect to standard approaches based on voxels, feature selection, and classification by SVM. In other words, the fusion of a system based on voxels and an ensemble of texture descriptors enhances the performance of voxel-based approaches.



Supporting the Distributed Execution of Clinical Guidelines by Multiple Agents

Publication date: Available online 18 May 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine

Author(s): Alessio Bottrighi, Luca Piovesan, Paolo Terenziani

Abstract

Clinical guidelines (GLs) are widely adopted in order to improve the quality of patient care, and to optimize it. To achieve such goals, their application on a specific patient usually requires the interventions of different agents, with different roles (e.g., physician, nurse), abilities (e.g., specialist in the treatment of alcohol-related problems) and contexts (e.g., many chronic patients may be treated at home). Additionally, the responsibility of the application of a guideline to a patient is usually retained by a physician, but delegation of responsibility (of the whole guideline, or of a part of it) is often used\required (e.g., delegation to a specialist), as well as the possibility, for a responsible, to select the executor of an action (e.g., a physician may retain the responsibility of an action, but delegate to a nurse its execution). To manage such phenomena, proper support to agent interaction and communication must be provided, providing agents with facilities for (1) treatment continuity (2) contextualization, (3) responsibility assignment and delegation (4) check of agent "appropriateness". In this paper we extend GLARE, a computerized GL management system, to support such needs. We illustrate our approach by means of a practical case study.



Project INSIDE: towards autonomous semi-unstructured human–robot social interaction in autism therapy

Publication date: May 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Volume 96

Author(s): Francisco S. Melo, Alberto Sardinha, David Belo, Marta Couto, Miguel Faria, Anabela Farias, Hugo Gambôa, Cátia Jesus, Mithun Kinarullathil, Pedro Lima, Luís Luz, André Mateus, Isabel Melo, Plinio Moreno, Daniel Osório, Ana Paiva, Jhielson Pimentel, João Rodrigues, Pedro Sequeira, Rubén Solera-Ureña

Abstract

This paper describes the INSIDE system, a networked robot system designed to allow the use of mobile robots as active players in the therapy of children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD). While a significant volume of work has explored the impact of robots in ASD therapy, most such work comprises remotely operated robots and/or well-structured interaction dynamics. In contrast, the INSIDE system allows for complex, semi-unstructured interaction in ASD therapy while featuring a fully autonomous robot. In this paper we describe the hardware and software infrastructure that supports such rich form of interaction, as well as the design methodology that guided the development of the INSIDE system. We also present some results on the use of our system both in pilot and in a long-term study comprising multiple therapy sessions with children at Hospital Garcia de Orta, in Portugal, highlighting the robustness and autonomy of the system as a whole.



BDI personal medical assistant agents: The case of trauma tracking and alerting

Publication date: May 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Volume 96

Author(s): Angelo Croatti, Sara Montagna, Alessandro Ricci, Emiliano Gamberini, Vittorio Albarello, Vanni Agnoletti

Abstract

Personal assistant agents can have an important role in healthcare as a smart technology to support physicians in their daily work, helping to tackle the increasing complexity of their task environment. In this paper we present and discuss a personal medical assistant agent technology for trauma documentation and management, based on the Belief-Desire-Intention (BDI) architecture. The purpose of the personal assistant agent is twofold: to assist the Trauma Team in doing precision tracking during a trauma resuscitation, so as to (automatically) produce an accurate documentation of the trauma, and to generate alerts at real-time, to be eventually displayed either on smart-glasses or room-display.



Personalized conciliation of clinical guidelines for comorbid patients through multi-agent planning

Publication date: May 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Volume 96

Author(s): Juan Fdez-Olivares, Eva Onaindia, Luis Castillo, Jaume Jordán, Juan Cózar

Abstract

The conciliation of multiple single-disease guidelines for comorbid patients entails solving potential clinical interactions, discovering synergies in the diagnosis and the recommendations, and managing clinical equipoise situations. Personalized conciliation of multiple guidelines considering additionally patient preferences brings some further difficulties. Recently, several works have explored distinct techniques to come up with an automated process for the conciliation of clinical guidelines for comorbid patients but very little attention has been put in integrating the patient preferences into this process.

In this work, a Multi-Agent Planning (MAP) framework that extends previous work on single-disease temporal Hierarchical Task Networks (HTN) is proposed for the automated conciliation of clinical guidelines with patient-centered preferences. Each agent encapsulates a single-disease Computer Interpretable Guideline (CIG) formalized as an HTN domain and conciliates the decision procedures that encode the clinical recommendations of its CIG with the decision procedures of the other agents' CIGs. During conciliation, drug-related interactions, scheduling constraints as well as redundant actions and multiple support interactions are solved by an automated planning process. Moreover, the simultaneous application of the patient preferences in multiple diseases may potentially bring about contradictory clinical decisions and more interactions. As a final step, the most adequate personalized treatment plan according to the patient preferences is selected by a Multi-Criteria Decision Making (MCDM) process. The MAP approach is tested on a case study that builds upon a simplified representation of two real clinical guidelines for Diabetes Mellitus and Arterial Hypertension.



Indexing the Event Calculus: Towards practical human-readable Personal Health Systems

Publication date: May 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Volume 96

Author(s): Nicola Falcionelli, Paolo Sernani, Albert Brugués, Dagmawi Neway Mekuria, Davide Calvaresi, Michael Schumacher, Aldo Franco Dragoni, Stefano Bromuri

Abstract

Personal Health Systems (PHS) are mobile solutions tailored to monitoring patients affected by chronic non communicable diseases. In general, a patient affected by a chronic disease can generate large amounts of events: for example, in Type 1 Diabetic patients generate several glucose events per day, ranging from at least 6 events per day (under normal monitoring) to 288 per day when wearing a continuous glucose monitor (CGM) that samples the blood every 5 minutes for several days. Just by itself, without considering other physiological parameters, it would be impossible for medical doctors to individually and accurately follow every patient, highlighting the need of simple approaches towards querying physiological time series. Achieving this with current technology is not an easy task, as on one hand it cannot be expected that medical doctors have the technical knowledge to query databases and on the other hand these time series include thousands of events, which requires to re-think the way data is indexed.

Anyhow, handling data streams efficiently is not enough. Domain experts' knowledge must be explicitly included into PHSs in a way that it can be easily readed and modified by medical staffs. Logic programming represents the perfect programming paradygm to accomplish this task. In this work, an Event Calculus-based reasoning framework to standardize and express domain-knowledge in the form of monitoring rules is suggested, and applied to three different use cases. However, if online monitoring has to be achieved, the reasoning performance must improve dramatically. For this reason, three promising mechanisms to index the Event Calculus Knowledge Base are proposed. All of them are based on different types of tree indexing structures: k-d trees, interval trees and red-black trees. The paper then compares and analyzes the performance of the three indexing techniques, by computing the time needed to check different type of rules (and eventually generating alerts), when the number of recorded events (e.g. values of physiological parameters) increases. The results show that customized jREC performs much better when the event average inter-arrival time is little compared to the checked rule time-window. Instead, where the events are more sparse, the use of k-d trees with standard EC is advisable.

Finally, the Multi-Agent paradigm helps to wrap the various components of the system: the reasoning engines represent the agent minds, and the sensors are its body. The said agents have been developed in MAGPIE, a mobile event based Java agent platform.



Towards a modular decision support system for radiomics: A case study on rectal cancer

Publication date: May 2019

Source: Artificial Intelligence in Medicine, Volume 96

Author(s): Roberto Gatta, Mauro Vallati, Nicola Dinapoli, Carlotta Masciocchi, Jacopo Lenkowicz, Davide Cusumano, Calogero Casá, Alessandra Farchione, Andrea Damiani, Johan van Soest, Andre Dekker, Vincenzo Valentini

Abstract

Following the personalized medicine paradigm, there is a growing interest in medical agents capable of predicting the effect of therapies on patients, by exploiting the amount of data that is now available for each patient. In disciplines like oncology, where images and scans are available, the exploitation of medical images can provide an additional source of potentially useful information. The study and analysis of features extracted by medical images, exploited for predictive purposes, is termed radiomics. A number of tools are available for supporting some of the steps of the radiomics process, but there is a lack of approaches which are able to deal with all the steps of the process.

In this paper, we introduce a medical agent-based decision support system capable of handling the whole radiomics process. The proposed system is tested on two independent data sets of patients treated for rectal cancer. Experimental results indicate that the system is able to generate highly performant centre-specific predictive model, and show the issues related to differences in data sets collected by different centres, and how such issues can affect the performance of the generated predictive models.



Alexandros Sfakianakis
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