摘要
Alzheimer’s disease(AD)is a neurodegenerative disease that severely affects the activities of daily living in aged individuals,which typically needs to be diagnosed at an early stage.Generative adversarial networks(GANs)provide a new deep learning method that show good performance in image processing,while it remains to be verified whether a GAN brings benefit in AD diagnosis.The purpose of this research is to systematically review psychoradiological studies on the application of a GAN in the diagnosis of AD from the aspects of classification of AD state and AD-related image processing compared with other methods.In addition,we evaluated the research methodology and provided suggestions from the perspective of clinical application.Compared with othermethods,a GAN has higher accuracy in the classification of AD state and better performance in AD-related image processing(e.g.image denoising and segmentation).Most studies used data from public databases but lacked clinical validation,and the process of quantitative assessment and comparison in these studies lacked clinicians’participation,which may have an impact on the improvement of generation effect and generalization ability of the GAN model.The application value of GANs in the classification of AD state and AD-related image processing has been confirmed in reviewed studies.Improvement methods toward better GAN architecture were also discussed in this paper.In sum,the present study demonstrated advancing diagnostic performance and clinical applicability of GAN for AD,and suggested that the future researchers should consider recruiting clinicians to compare the algorithm with clinician manual methods and evaluate the clinical effect of the algorithm.
基金
supported by grants from National Key Research and Development Project(2018YFC1704605)
National Natural Science Foundation of China(81401398)
Sichuan Science and Technology Program(2019YJ0049)
Sichuan Provincial Health and Family Planning Commission(19PJ080)
National College Students’innovation and entrepreneurship training program(C2021116624)
Chinese Postdoctoral Science Foundation(2013M530401)
Dr Gong was also supported by the US-China joint grant(Grant No.NSFC81761128023)
NIH/NIMH R01MH112189-01.