IVCVLGJan 3, 2022

Lung-Originated Tumor Segmentation from Computed Tomography Scan (LOTUS) Benchmark

arXiv:2201.00458v11 citations
Originality Synthesis-oriented
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This work provides a standardized benchmark for researchers in medical imaging to compare lung tumor segmentation methods, though it is incremental as it builds on existing deep learning approaches.

The LOTUS Benchmark was created to address the challenge of reliably evaluating lung tumor segmentation methods by providing a unified dataset and metrics, resulting in 9 teams reaching the final stage with deep learning-based algorithms showing promising results but needing improvement in false positive reduction.

Lung cancer is one of the deadliest cancers, and in part its effective diagnosis and treatment depend on the accurate delineation of the tumor. Human-centered segmentation, which is currently the most common approach, is subject to inter-observer variability, and is also time-consuming, considering the fact that only experts are capable of providing annotations. Automatic and semi-automatic tumor segmentation methods have recently shown promising results. However, as different researchers have validated their algorithms using various datasets and performance metrics, reliably evaluating these methods is still an open challenge. The goal of the Lung-Originated Tumor Segmentation from Computed Tomography Scan (LOTUS) Benchmark created through 2018 IEEE Video and Image Processing (VIP) Cup competition, is to provide a unique dataset and pre-defined metrics, so that different researchers can develop and evaluate their methods in a unified fashion. The 2018 VIP Cup started with a global engagement from 42 countries to access the competition data. At the registration stage, there were 129 members clustered into 28 teams from 10 countries, out of which 9 teams made it to the final stage and 6 teams successfully completed all the required tasks. In a nutshell, all the algorithms proposed during the competition, are based on deep learning models combined with a false positive reduction technique. Methods developed by the three finalists show promising results in tumor segmentation, however, more effort should be put into reducing the false positive rate. This competition manuscript presents an overview of the VIP-Cup challenge, along with the proposed algorithms and results.

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