Classification of Breast Cancer Based on Histology Images Using Convolutional Neural Networks

In recent years, the classification of breast cancer has been the topic of interest in the field of Healthcare informatics, because it is the second main cause of cancer-related deaths in women. Breast cancer can be identified using a biopsy where tissue is removed and studied under microscope. The...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Dalal Bardou, Kun Zhang, Sayed Mohammad Ahmad
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IEEE 2018-01-01
Series:IEEE Access
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/document/8353225/
Description
Summary:In recent years, the classification of breast cancer has been the topic of interest in the field of Healthcare informatics, because it is the second main cause of cancer-related deaths in women. Breast cancer can be identified using a biopsy where tissue is removed and studied under microscope. The diagnosis is based on the qualification of the histopathologist, who will look for abnormal cells. However, if the histopathologist is not well-trained, this may lead to wrong diagnosis. With the recent advances in image processing and machine learning, there is an interest in attempting to develop a reliable pattern recognition based systems to improve the quality of diagnosis. In this paper, we compare two machine learning approaches for the automatic classification of breast cancer histology images into benign and malignant and into benign and malignant sub-classes. The first approach is based on the extraction of a set of handcrafted features encoded by two coding models (bag of words and locality constrained linear coding) and trained by support vector machines, while the second approach is based on the design of convolutional neural networks. We have also experimentally tested dataset augmentation techniques to enhance the accuracy of the convolutional neural network as well as “handcrafted features + convolutional neural network”and “convolutional neural network features + classifier”configurations. The results show convolutional neural networks outperformed the handcrafted feature based classifier, where we achieved accuracy between 96.15% and 98.33% for the binary classification and 83.31% and 88.23% for the multi-class classification.
ISSN:2169-3536