Anonymizing Radiographs Using an Object Detection Deep Learning Algorithm

Bardia Khosravi, John P. Mickley, Pouria Rouzrokh, Michael J. Taunton, Annalise Noelle Larson, Bradley J. Erickson, Cody C. Wyles

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Radiographic markers contain protected health information that must be removed before public release. This work presents a deep learning algorithm that localizes radiographic markers and selectively removes them to enable de-identified data sharing. The authors annotated 2000 hip and pelvic radiographs to train an object detection computer vision model. Data were split into training, validation, and test sets at the patient level. Extracted markers were then characterized using an image processing algorithm, and potentially useful markers (eg, “L” and “R”) without identifying information were retained. The model achieved an area under the precision-recall curve of 0.96 on the internal test set. The de-identification accuracy was 100% (400 of 400), with a de-identification false-positive rate of 1% (eight of 632) and a retention accuracy of 93% (359 of 386) for laterality markers. The algorithm was further validated on an external dataset of chest radiographs, achieving a de-identification accuracy of 96% (221 of 231). After fine-tuning the model on 20 images from the external dataset to investigate the potential for improvement, a 99.6% (230 of 231, P =.04) de-identification accuracy and decreased false-positive rate of 5% (26 of 512) were achieved. These results demonstrate the effectiveness of a two-pass approach in image de-identification.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Article numbere230085
JournalRadiology: Artificial Intelligence
Volume5
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 2023

Keywords

  • Conventional Radiography
  • Convolutional Neural Network (CNN)
  • Experimental In-vestigations
  • Skeletal-Axial
  • Supervised Learning
  • Thorax
  • Transfer Learning

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Radiological and Ultrasound Technology
  • Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging
  • Artificial Intelligence

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