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Researchers develop AutoProstate to automatically generate prostate cancer diagnostic reports using deep learning

prostate cancer

Researchers from the School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences have developed a computer-aided prostate cancer diagnosis system, AutoProstate, which uses deep learning to generate an automatic report which will aid radiologists in identifying and diagnosing prostate cancers with greater accuracy. Their findings were published in Cancers.

The current clinical pathway gives rise to missed cancers, which increases mortality risk, and unnecessary biopsies, with side effects that can include bleeding, infection, and difficulty urinating.

Current pressures on the pathway are set to worsen due to rising case incidence and an increasing shortage of specialist radiologists to read prostate MRI.

The researchers behind AutoProstate say artificial intelligence holds the key to improving the diagnostic accuracy of radiologists, as well as alleviating pressures on the pathway.

AutoProstate is a deep learning-powered framework for automatic prostate cancer assessment and reporting.

On how AutoProstate will fit into the clinical pathway, Mr Mehta explained that following multiparametric MRI, AutoProstate will segment the whole prostate, the prostate’s zonal anatomy, and any clinically significant tumors that are present within the prostate, using a patient’s scans.

Subsequently, an automatic diagnostic report will be generated, which will be available to the examining radiologist.

“The automatic report generated by AutoProstate will provide radiologists with additional information at the time of diagnosis, helping to improve diagnostic accuracy, save time, and enhance reporting quality,” Mr Mehta said.

The automatic report is novel in structure and features four main sections: Patient Details, Prostate Size and PSA Density, Clinically Significant Lesion Candidates, and Findings Summary.

“A key benefit of the report is that it automates the calculation of several prostate and lesion-level biomarkers, replacing the crude estimation methods that are currently used,” Mr Mehta said.

“Crucially, all of the biomarkers are easily verifiable as the segmentation outputs of AutoProstate, used to calculate the biomarkers, are displayed in the report in an interactive way.”

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