1. AI-powered visual diagnosis of vulvar lichen sclerosus: A pilot study.
- Author
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Gottfrois P, Zhu J, Steiger A, Amruthalingam L, Kind AB, Heinzelmann V, Mang C, Navarini AA, and Mueller SM
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Pilot Projects, Deep Learning, Middle Aged, Adult, Machine Learning, Vulvar Lichen Sclerosus diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Vulvar lichen sclerosus (VLS) is a chronic inflammatory skin condition associated with significant impairment of quality of life and potential risk of malignant transformation. However, diagnosis of VLS is often delayed due to its variable clinical presentation and shame-related late consultation. Machine learning (ML)-trained image recognition software could potentially facilitate early diagnosis of VLS., Objective: To develop a ML-trained image-based model for the detection of VLS., Methods: Images of both VLS and non-VLS anogenital skin were collected, anonymized, and selected. In the VLS images, 10 typical skin signs (whitening, hyperkeratosis, purpura/ecchymosis, erosion/ulcers/excoriation, erythema, labial fusion, narrowing of the introitus, labia minora resorption, posterior commissure (fourchette) band formation and atrophic shiny skin) were manually labelled. A deep convolutional neural network was built using the training set as input data and then evaluated using the test set, where the developed algorithm was run three times and the results were then averaged., Results: A total of 684 VLS images and 403 non-VLS images (70% healthy vulva and 30% with other vulvar diseases) were included after the selection process. A deep learning algorithm was developed by training on 775 images (469 VLS and 306 non-VLS) and testing on 312 images (215 VLS and 97 non-VLS). This algorithm performed accurately in discriminating between VLS and non-VLS cases (including healthy individuals and non-VLS dermatoses), with mean values of 0.94, 0.99 and 0.95 for recall, precision and accuracy, respectively., Conclusions: This pilot project demonstrated that our image-based deep learning model can effectively discriminate between VLS and non-VLS skin, representing a promising tool for future use by clinicians and possibly patients. However, prospective studies are needed to validate the applicability and accuracy of our model in a real-world setting., (© 2024 European Academy of Dermatology and Venereology.)
- Published
- 2024
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