Sector expansion and elliptical modeling of blue-gray ovoids for basal cell carcinoma discrimination in dermoscopy images

Pelin Guvenc, Robert W. Leander, Serkan Kefel, William V. Stoecker, Ryan K. Rader, Kristen A. Hinton, Sherea M. Stricklin, Harold S. Rabinovitz, Margaret Oliviero, Randy H. Moss

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Blue-gray ovoids (B-GOs), a critical dermoscopic structure for basal cell carcinoma (BCC), offer an opportunity for automatic detection of BCC. Due to variation in size and color, B-GOs can be easily mistaken for similar structures in benign lesions. Analysis of these structures could afford accurate characterization and automatic recognition of B-GOs, furthering the goal of automatic BCC detection. This study utilizes a novel segmentation method to discriminate B-GOs from their benign mimics. Methods: Contact dermoscopy images of 68 confirmed BCCs with B-GOs were obtained. Another set of 131 contact dermoscopic images of benign lesions possessing B-GO mimics provided a benign competitive set. A total of 22 B-GO features were analyzed for all structures: 21 color features and one size feature. Regarding segmentation, this study utilized a novel sector-based, non-recursive segmentation method to expand the masks applied to the B-GOs and mimicking structures. Results: Logistic regression analysis determined that blue chromaticity was the best feature for discriminating true B-GOs in BCC from benign, mimicking structures. Discrimination of malignant structures was optimal when the final B-GO border was approximated by a best-fit ellipse. Using this optimal configuration, logistic regression analysis discriminated the expanded and fitted malignant structures from similar benign structures with a classification rate as high as 96.5%. Conclusions: Experimental results show that color features allow accurate expansion and localization of structures from seed areas. Modeling these structures as ellipses allows high discrimination of B-GOs in BCCs from similar structures in benign images.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)e532-e536
JournalSkin Research and Technology
Volume19
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Basal Cell Carcinoma
  • Blue-Gray Ovoids
  • Computational Intelligence
  • Dermoscopy
  • Image Analysis
  • Region Growing
  • Skin Lesion

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Dermatology

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