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Publications

Publications by Ana Maria Mendonça

2020

DR vertical bar GRADUATE: Uncertainty-aware deep learning-based diabetic retinopathy grading in eye fundus images

Authors
Araujo, T; Aresta, G; Mendonca, L; Penas, S; Maia, C; Carneiro, A; Maria Mendonca, AM; Campilho, A;

Publication
MEDICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS

Abstract
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) grading is crucial in determining the adequate treatment and follow up of patient, but the screening process can be tiresome and prone to errors. Deep learning approaches have shown promising performance as computer-aided diagnosis (CAD) systems, but their black-box behaviour hinders clinical application. We propose DR vertical bar GRADUATE, a novel deep learning-based DR grading CAD system that supports its decision by providing a medically interpretable explanation and an estimation of how uncertain that prediction is, allowing the ophthalmologist to measure how much that decision should be trusted. We designed DR vertical bar GRADUATE taking into account the ordinal nature of the DR grading problem. A novel Gaussian-sampling approach built upon a Multiple Instance Learning framework allow DR vertical bar GRADUATE to infer an image grade associated with an explanation map and a prediction uncertainty while being trained only with image-wise labels. DR vertical bar GRADUATE was trained on the Kaggle DR detection training set and evaluated across multiple datasets. In DR grading, a quadratic-weighted Cohen's kappa (kappa) between 0.71 and 0.84 was achieved in five different datasets. We show that high kappa values occur for images with low prediction uncertainty, thus indicating that this uncertainty is a valid measure of the predictions' quality. Further, bad quality images are generally associated with higher uncertainties, showing that images not suitable for diagnosis indeed lead to less trustworthy predictions. Additionally, tests on unfamiliar medical image data types suggest that DR vertical bar GRADUATE allows outlier detection. The attention maps generally highlight regions of interest for diagnosis. These results show the great potential of DR vertical bar GRADUATE as a second-opinion system in DR severity grading.

2020

Optic Disc and Fovea Detection in Color Eye Fundus Images

Authors
Mendonça, AM; Melo, T; Araújo, T; Campilho, A;

Publication
Image Analysis and Recognition - 17th International Conference, ICIAR 2020, Póvoa de Varzim, Portugal, June 24-26, 2020, Proceedings, Part II

Abstract
The optic disc (OD) and the fovea are relevant landmarks in fundus images. Their localization and segmentation can facilitate the detection of some retinal lesions and the assessment of their importance to the severity and progression of several eye disorders. Distinct methodologies have been developed for detecting these structures, mainly based on color and vascular information. The methodology herein described combines the entropy of the vessel directions with the image intensities for finding the OD center and uses a sliding band filter for segmenting the OD. The fovea center corresponds to the darkest point inside a region defined from the OD position and radius. Both the Messidor and the IDRiD datasets are used for evaluating the performance of the developed methods. In the first one, a success rate of 99.56% and 100.00% are achieved for OD and fovea localization. Regarding the OD segmentation, the mean Jaccard index and Dice’s coefficient obtained are 0.87 and 0.94, respectively. The proposed methods are also amongst the top-3 performing solutions submitted to the IDRiD online challenge. © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020.

2020

A Multi-dataset Approach for DME Risk Detection in Eye Fundus Images

Authors
Carvalho, CB; Pedrosa, J; Maia, C; Penas, S; Carneiro, A; Mendonça, L; Mendonça, AM; Campilho, A;

Publication
Image Analysis and Recognition - 17th International Conference, ICIAR 2020, Póvoa de Varzim, Portugal, June 24-26, 2020, Proceedings, Part II

Abstract
Diabetic macular edema is a leading cause of visual loss for patients with diabetes. While diagnosis can only be performed by optical coherence tomography, diabetic macular edema risk assessment is often performed in eye fundus images in screening scenarios through the detection of hard exudates. Such screening scenarios are often associated with large amounts of data, high costs and high burden on specialists, motivating then the development of methodologies for automatic diabetic macular edema risk prediction. Nevertheless, significant dataset domain bias, due to different acquisition equipment, protocols and/or different populations can have significantly detrimental impact on the performance of automatic methods when transitioning to a new dataset, center or scenario. As such, in this study, a method based on residual neural networks is proposed for the classification of diabetic macular edema risk. This method is then validated across multiple public datasets, simulating the deployment in a multi-center setting and thereby studying the method’s generalization capability and existing dataset domain bias. Furthermore, the method is tested on a private dataset which more closely represents a realistic screening scenario. An average area under the curve across all public datasets of 0.891 ± 0.013 was obtained with a ResNet50 architecture trained on a limited amount of images from a single public dataset (IDRiD). It is also shown that screening scenarios are significantly more challenging and that training across multiple datasets leads to an improvement of performance (area under the curve of 0.911 ± 0.009). © Springer Nature Switzerland AG 2020.

2020

Microaneurysm detection in color eye fundus images for diabetic retinopathy screening

Authors
Melo, T; Mendonca, AM; Campilho, A;

Publication
COMPUTERS IN BIOLOGY AND MEDICINE

Abstract
Diabetic retinopathy (DR) is a diabetes complication, which in extreme situations may lead to blindness. Since the first stages are often asymptomatic, regular eye examinations are required for an early diagnosis. As microaneurysms (MAs) are one of the first signs of DR, several automated methods have been proposed for their detection in order to reduce the ophthalmologists' workload. Although local convergence filters (LCFs) have already been applied for feature extraction, their potential as MA enhancement operators was not explored yet. In this work, we propose a sliding band filter for MA enhancement aiming at obtaining a set of initial MA candidates. Then, a combination of the filter responses with color, contrast and shape information is used by an ensemble of classifiers for final candidate classification. Finally, for each eye fundus image, a score is computed from the confidence values assigned to the MAs detected in the image. The performance of the proposed methodology was evaluated in four datasets. At the lesion level, sensitivities of 64% and 81% were achieved for an average of 8 false positives per image (FPIs) in e-ophtha MA and SCREEN-DR, respectively. In the last dataset, an AUC of 0.83 was also obtained for DR detection.

2020

Data Augmentation for Improving Proliferative Diabetic Retinopathy Detection in Eye Fundus Images

Authors
Araujo, T; Aresta, G; Mendonca, L; Penas, S; Maia, C; Carneiro, A; Mendonca, AM; Campilho, A;

Publication
IEEE ACCESS

Abstract
Proliferative diabetic retinopathy (PDR) is an advanced diabetic retinopathy stage, characterized by neovascularization, which leads to ocular complications and severe vision loss. However, the available DR-labeled retinal image datasets have a small representation of images of the severest DR grades, and thus there is lack of PDR cases for training DR grading models. Additionally, the criteria for labelling these images in the publicly available datasets is not always clear, with some images which do not show typical PDR lesions being labeled as PDR due to the presence of photo-coagulation treatment and laser marks. This problem, together with the datasets' high class imbalance, leads to a limited variability of the samples, which the typical data augmentation and class balancing cannot fully mitigate. We propose a heuristic-based data augmentation scheme based on the synthesis of neovessel (NV)-like structures that compensates for the lack of PDR cases in DR-labeled datasets. The proposed neovessel generation algorithm relies on the general knowledge of common location and shape of these structures. NVs are generated and introduced in pre-existent retinal images which can then be used for enlarging deep neural networks' training sets. The data augmentation scheme was tested on multiple datasets, and allows to improve the model's capacity to detect NVs.

2021

Segmentation of COVID-19 Lesions in CT Images

Authors
Rocha, J; Pereira, S; Campilho, A; Mendonça, AM;

Publication
IEEE EMBS International Conference on Biomedical and Health Informatics, BHI 2021, Athens, Greece, July 27-30, 2021

Abstract
The worldwide pandemic caused by the new coronavirus (COVID-19) has encouraged the development of multiple computer-aided diagnosis systems to automate daily clinical tasks, such as abnormality detection and classification. Among these tasks, the segmentation of COVID lesions is of high interest to the scientific community, enabling further lesion characterization. Automating the segmentation process can be a useful strategy to provide a fast and accurate second opinion to the physicians, and thus increase the reliability of the diagnosis and disease stratification. The current work explores a CNN-based approach to segment multiple COVID lesions. It includes the implementation of a U-Net structure with a ResNet34 encoder able to deal with the highly imbalanced nature of the problem, as well as the great variability of the COVID lesions, namely in terms of size, shape, and quantity. This approach yields a Dice score of 64.1%, when evaluated on the publicly available COVID-19-20 Lung CT Lesion Segmentation GrandChallenge data set. © 2021 IEEE

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