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Cited 7 time in webofscience Cited 14 time in scopus
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Joint prediction and time estimation of COVID-19 developing severe symptoms using chest CT scan

Authors
Zhu, XiaofengSong, BinShi, FengChen, YanboHu, RongyaoGan, JiangzhangZhang, WenhaiLi, ManWang, LiyeGao, YaozongShan, FeiShen, Dinggang
Issue Date
Jan-2021
Publisher
ELSEVIER
Keywords
Coronavirus disease; CT Scan data; Feature selection; Sample selection; Imbalance classification
Citation
MEDICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS, v.67
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
MEDICAL IMAGE ANALYSIS
Volume
67
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/50270
DOI
10.1016/j.media.2020.101824
ISSN
1361-8415
Abstract
With the rapidly worldwide spread of Coronavirus disease (COVID-19), it is of great importance to conduct early diagnosis of COVID-19 and predict the conversion time that patients possibly convert to the severe stage, for designing effective treatment plans and reducing the clinicians' workloads. In this study, we propose a joint classification and regression method to determine whether the patient would develop severe symptoms in the later time formulated as a classification task, and if yes, the conversion time will be predicted formulated as a classification task. To do this, the proposed method takes into account 1) the weight for each sample to reduce the outliers' influence and explore the problem of imbalance classification, and 2) the weight for each feature via a sparsity regularization term to remove the redundant features of the high-dimensional data and learn the shared information across two tasks, i.e., the classification and the regression. To our knowledge, this study is the first work to jointly predict the disease progression and the conversion time, which could help clinicians to deal with the potential severe cases in time or even save the patients' lives. Experimental analysis was conducted on a real data set from two hospitals with 408 chest computed tomography (CT) scans. Results show that our method achieves the best classification (e.g., 85.91% of accuracy) and regression (e.g., 0.462 of the correlation coefficient) performance, compared to all comparison methods. Moreover, our proposed method yields 76.97% of accuracy for predicting the severe cases, 0.524 of the correlation coefficient, and 0.55 days difference for the conversion time. (C) 2020 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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