Interpretable laryngeal tumor grading of histopathological images via depth domain adaptive network with integration gradient CAM and priori experience-guided attention

Comput Biol Med. 2023 Mar:154:106447. doi: 10.1016/j.compbiomed.2022.106447. Epub 2022 Dec 20.

Abstract

Tumor grading and interpretability of laryngeal cancer is a key yet challenging task in the clinical diagnosis, mainly because of the commonly used low-magnification pathological images lack fine cellular structure information and accurate localization, the diagnosis results of pathologists are different from those of attentional convolutional network -based methods, and the gradient-weighted class activation mapping method cannot be optimized to create the best visualization map. To address this problem, we propose an end-to-end depth domain adaptive network (DDANet) with integration gradient CAM and priori experience-guided attention to improve the tumor grading performance and interpretability by introducing the pathologist's a priori experience in high-magnification into the depth model. Specifically, a novel priori experience-guided attention (PE-GA) method is developed to solve the traditional unsupervised attention optimization problem. Besides, a novel integration gradient CAM is proposed to mitigate overfitting, information redundancies and low sparsity of the Grad-CAM graphs generated by the PE-GA method. Furthermore, we establish a set of quantitative evaluation metric systems for model visual interpretation. Extensive experimental results show that compared with the state-of-the-art methods, the average grading accuracy is increased to 88.43% (↑4.04%), the effective interpretable rate is increased to 52.73% (↑11.45%). Additionally, it effectively reduces the difference between CV-based method and pathology in diagnosis results. Importantly, the visualized interpretive maps are closer to the region of interest of concern by pathologists, and our model outperforms pathologists with different levels of experience.

Keywords: Attention mechanism; Domain adaptive; Laryngeal cancer; Tumor grading; Visually interpretable.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Humans
  • Laryngeal Neoplasms* / diagnostic imaging
  • Neoplasm Grading