Analysis of Chest X-ray for COVID-19 Diagnosis as a Use Case for an HPC-Enabled Data Analysis and Machine Learning Platform for Medical Diagnosis Support.
Chadi S BarakatMarcel AachAndreas A SchuppertSigurður BrynjólfssonSebastian Johannes Johannes FritschMorris RiedelPublished in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
The COVID-19 pandemic shed light on the need for quick diagnosis tools in healthcare, leading to the development of several algorithmic models for disease detection. Though these models are relatively easy to build, their training requires a lot of data, storage, and resources, which may not be available for use by medical institutions or could be beyond the skillset of the people who most need these tools. This paper describes a data analysis and machine learning platform that takes advantage of high-performance computing infrastructure for medical diagnosis support applications. This platform is validated by re-training a previously published deep learning model (COVID-Net) on new data, where it is shown that the performance of the model is improved through large-scale hyperparameter optimisation that uncovered optimal training parameter combinations. The per-class accuracy of the model, especially for COVID-19 and pneumonia, is higher when using the tuned hyperparameters (healthy: 96.5%; pneumonia: 61.5%; COVID-19: 78.9%) as opposed to parameters chosen through traditional methods (healthy: 93.6%; pneumonia: 46.1%; COVID-19: 76.3%). Furthermore, training speed-up analysis shows a major decrease in training time as resources increase, from 207 min using 1 node to 54 min when distributed over 32 nodes, but highlights the presence of a cut-off point where the communication overhead begins to affect performance. The developed platform is intended to provide the medical field with a technical environment for developing novel portable artificial-intelligence-based tools for diagnosis support.
Keyphrases
- data analysis
- coronavirus disease
- machine learning
- artificial intelligence
- sars cov
- healthcare
- deep learning
- big data
- virtual reality
- high throughput
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- high resolution
- electronic health record
- radiation therapy
- systematic review
- early stage
- respiratory failure
- magnetic resonance
- social media
- mass spectrometry
- rectal cancer
- sensitive detection
- mechanical ventilation
- neural network