Adway Kanhere

CV
h-index14
8papers
14citations
Novelty39%
AI Score22

8 Papers

LGMar 10, 2023
Optimizing Federated Learning for Medical Image Classification on Distributed Non-iid Datasets with Partial Labels

Pranav Kulkarni, Adway Kanhere, Paul H. Yi et al.

Numerous large-scale chest x-ray datasets have spearheaded expert-level detection of abnormalities using deep learning. However, these datasets focus on detecting a subset of disease labels that could be present, thus making them distributed and non-iid with partial labels. Recent literature has indicated the impact of batch normalization layers on the convergence of federated learning due to domain shift associated with non-iid data with partial labels. To that end, we propose FedFBN, a federated learning framework that draws inspiration from transfer learning by using pretrained networks as the model backend and freezing the batch normalization layers throughout the training process. We evaluate FedFBN with current FL strategies using synthetic iid toy datasets and large-scale non-iid datasets across scenarios with partial and complete labels. Our results demonstrate that FedFBN outperforms current aggregation strategies for training global models using distributed and non-iid data with partial labels.

IVNov 11, 2022
From Competition to Collaboration: Making Toy Datasets on Kaggle Clinically Useful for Chest X-Ray Diagnosis Using Federated Learning

Pranav Kulkarni, Adway Kanhere, Paul H. Yi et al.

Chest X-ray (CXR) datasets hosted on Kaggle, though useful from a data science competition standpoint, have limited utility in clinical use because of their narrow focus on diagnosing one specific disease. In real-world clinical use, multiple diseases need to be considered since they can co-exist in the same patient. In this work, we demonstrate how federated learning (FL) can be used to make these toy CXR datasets from Kaggle clinically useful. Specifically, we train a single FL classification model (`global`) using two separate CXR datasets -- one annotated for presence of pneumonia and the other for presence of pneumothorax (two common and life-threatening conditions) -- capable of diagnosing both. We compare the performance of the global FL model with models trained separately on both datasets (`baseline`) for two different model architectures. On a standard, naive 3-layer CNN architecture, the global FL model achieved AUROC of 0.84 and 0.81 for pneumonia and pneumothorax, respectively, compared to 0.85 and 0.82, respectively, for both baseline models (p>0.05). Similarly, on a pretrained DenseNet121 architecture, the global FL model achieved AUROC of 0.88 and 0.91 for pneumonia and pneumothorax, respectively, compared to 0.89 and 0.91, respectively, for both baseline models (p>0.05). Our results suggest that FL can be used to create global `meta` models to make toy datasets from Kaggle clinically useful, a step forward towards bridging the gap from bench to bedside.

CVJan 17, 2023
From Isolation to Collaboration: Federated Class-Heterogeneous Learning for Chest X-Ray Classification

Pranav Kulkarni, Adway Kanhere, Paul H. Yi et al.

Federated learning (FL) is a promising paradigm to collaboratively train a global chest x-ray (CXR) classification model using distributed datasets while preserving patient privacy. A significant, yet relatively underexplored, challenge in FL is class-heterogeneity, where clients have different sets of classes. We propose surgical aggregation, a FL method that uses selective aggregation to collaboratively train a global model using distributed, class-heterogeneous datasets. Unlike other methods, our method does not rely on the assumption that clients share the same classes as other clients, know the classes of other clients, or have access to a fully annotated dataset. We evaluate surgical aggregation using class-heterogeneous CXR datasets across IID and non-IID settings. Our results show that our method outperforms current methods and has better generalizability.

CVJul 1, 2023
Towards Resource-Efficient Streaming of Large-Scale Medical Image Datasets for Deep Learning

Pranav Kulkarni, Adway Kanhere, Eliot Siegel et al.

Large-scale medical imaging datasets have accelerated deep learning (DL) for medical image analysis. However, the large scale of these datasets poses a challenge for researchers, resulting in increased storage and bandwidth requirements for hosting and accessing them. Since different researchers have different use cases and require different resolutions or formats for DL, it is neither feasible to anticipate every researcher's needs nor practical to store data in multiple resolutions and formats. To that end, we propose the Medical Image Streaming Toolkit (MIST), a format-agnostic database that enables streaming of medical images at different resolutions and formats from a single high-resolution copy. We evaluated MIST across eight popular, large-scale medical imaging datasets spanning different body parts, modalities, and formats. Our results showed that our framework reduced the storage and bandwidth requirements for hosting and downloading datasets without impacting image quality. We demonstrate that MIST addresses the challenges posed by large-scale medical imaging datasets by building a data-efficient and format-agnostic database to meet the diverse needs of researchers and reduce barriers to DL research in medical imaging.

CVMar 22, 2024
Anytime, Anywhere, Anyone: Investigating the Feasibility of Segment Anything Model for Crowd-Sourcing Medical Image Annotations

Pranav Kulkarni, Adway Kanhere, Dharmam Savani et al.

Curating annotations for medical image segmentation is a labor-intensive and time-consuming task that requires domain expertise, resulting in "narrowly" focused deep learning (DL) models with limited translational utility. Recently, foundation models like the Segment Anything Model (SAM) have revolutionized semantic segmentation with exceptional zero-shot generalizability across various domains, including medical imaging, and hold a lot of promise for streamlining the annotation process. However, SAM has yet to be evaluated in a crowd-sourced setting to curate annotations for training 3D DL segmentation models. In this work, we explore the potential of SAM for crowd-sourcing "sparse" annotations from non-experts to generate "dense" segmentation masks for training 3D nnU-Net models, a state-of-the-art DL segmentation model. Our results indicate that while SAM-generated annotations exhibit high mean Dice scores compared to ground-truth annotations, nnU-Net models trained on SAM-generated annotations perform significantly worse than nnU-Net models trained on ground-truth annotations ($p<0.001$, all).

IVApr 10, 2024
Improving Multi-Center Generalizability of GAN-Based Fat Suppression using Federated Learning

Pranav Kulkarni, Adway Kanhere, Harshita Kukreja et al.

Generative Adversarial Network (GAN)-based synthesis of fat suppressed (FS) MRIs from non-FS proton density sequences has the potential to accelerate acquisition of knee MRIs. However, GANs trained on single-site data have poor generalizability to external data. We show that federated learning can improve multi-center generalizability of GANs for synthesizing FS MRIs, while facilitating privacy-preserving multi-institutional collaborations.

IVMay 24, 2023
ISLE: An Intelligent Streaming Framework for High-Throughput AI Inference in Medical Imaging

Pranav Kulkarni, Sean Garin, Adway Kanhere et al.

As the adoption of Artificial Intelligence (AI) systems within the clinical environment grows, limitations in bandwidth and compute can create communication bottlenecks when streaming imaging data, leading to delays in patient care and increased cost. As such, healthcare providers and AI vendors will require greater computational infrastructure, therefore dramatically increasing costs. To that end, we developed ISLE, an intelligent streaming framework for high-throughput, compute- and bandwidth- optimized, and cost effective AI inference for clinical decision making at scale. In our experiments, ISLE on average reduced data transmission by 98.02% and decoding time by 98.09%, while increasing throughput by 2,730%. We show that ISLE results in faster turnaround times, and reduced overall cost of data, transmission, and compute, without negatively impacting clinical decision making using AI systems.

LGMay 12, 2023
Text2Cohort: Facilitating Intuitive Access to Biomedical Data with Natural Language Cohort Discovery

Pranav Kulkarni, Adway Kanhere, Paul H. Yi et al.

The Imaging Data Commons (IDC) is a cloud-based database that provides researchers with open access to cancer imaging data, with the goal of facilitating collaboration. However, cohort discovery within the IDC database has a significant technical learning curve. Recently, large language models (LLM) have demonstrated exceptional utility for natural language processing tasks. We developed Text2Cohort, a LLM-powered toolkit to facilitate user-friendly natural language cohort discovery in the IDC. Our method translates user input into IDC queries using grounding techniques and returns the query's response. We evaluate Text2Cohort on 50 natural language inputs, from information extraction to cohort discovery. Our toolkit successfully generated responses with an 88% accuracy and 0.94 F1 score. We demonstrate that Text2Cohort can enable researchers to discover and curate cohorts on IDC with high levels of accuracy using natural language in a more intuitive and user-friendly way.