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[도신호 교수/언론보도] No Bones About It: Deep Learning Speeds Diagnosis of Kids’ Growth Problems
No 34
Date 2017/02/22

NVIDIA 2016년 9월 21일

https://blogs.nvidia.com/blog/2016/09/21/deep-learning-bone-age-kids-growth/ 

 

 

Ask doctors and they’ll tell you: In children, there’s chronological age and there’s bone age. When the two don’t match, there’s a problem. Bones that mature too quickly or too slowly may impair a child’s growth. 

Radiologists measure bone age, or skeletal maturity, by comparing x-rays of children’s hands to the standard for their age. Aspects of this technique haven’t changed in more than 75 years. GPU-accelerated deep learning is poised to change that.

 

Researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital’s new Clinical Data Science Center are testing an automated bone-age analyzer they’ve created. It speeds diagnosis of children’s growth problems and is nearly as accurate as human radiologists.

 

 

What Bone Age Says About Health
 

Set to begin clinical trials soon, the automated analyzer would assist radiologists rather than replace them, said Synho Do, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School who leads the research team.

 

“Growth can be a general metric for a child’s health,” said Mark Michalski, director of Mass General’s data science center. (NVIDIA is a founding partner of the center.)

 

When a child’s growth is delayed or accelerated, the bone age test can tell doctors whether the cause is simply a family pattern or an indication of a chronic disease, endocrine disorder or genetic problem.

 

Bone Age Measurement Grows Up

 

But calculating bone age is a cumbersome, time-consuming process that requires radiologists to match digitized x-rays with images in a textbook published in the 1950s. 

“You look at beautiful digital images with modern technology and you flip through this old book trying to find the page with the right image,” Michalski said.

 

For Do, the problem was ripe for deep learning. He and the research team trained the neural network on about 7,400 x-rays and radiologist reports from Mass General’s records. Do said he was able to reduce training time by using the cuDNN version of the Caffe deep learning framework and the NVIDIA DIGITS DevBox deep learning appliance, equipped with four TITAN X GPUs and DIGITS deep learning training software.

 

“Without GPUs, I wouldn’t have been able to get the performance I needed, and I wouldn’t have been able to develop such an accurate algorithm,” said Do, who is assistant medical director for advanced health technology, research and development for the Massachusetts General Hospital physicians’ group.

Do expects even better performance in the future. In early September, the Mass General center became one of the first research institutions to receive our powerful DGX-1 deep learning system, the world’s first AI supercomputer in a box. 

 

Faster, More Accurate Diagnosis 

 

If the hospital can put Do’s automated bone age analyzer into practice, parents could see test results sooner.



“Parents often have to wait a day or more for a test result,” Do said. “This algorithm can give results in seconds.”



Deep learning could also boost accuracy by eliminating differences among radiologists with different training and experience, Do said. His bone age AI would process x-rays and provide suggested matches. The radiologist would choose from among these, and the system would generate a report on the results. The algorithm is 99 percent accurate, with an average error rate of plus or minus one year of age.

 

“This is a small step that takes us toward a more effective healthcare practice for all patients,” Michalski said.

 

Do and his research team presented an abstract describing their work on kids’ growth problems at the Conference on Machine Intelligence in Medical Imaging in Alexandria, VA, and plan to submit a paper soon. 

 

Hear Synho Do speak and learn more about the AI Revolution in Healthcare at GTC DC, Oct. 26-27 in Washington, DC. Register now. 

 

 

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