Differentiating Bacterial and Non-Bacterial Pneumonia on Chest CT Using Multi-Plane Features and Clinical Biomarkers.
RATIONALE AND OBJECTIVES: Timely and accurate classification of bacterial pneumonia (BP) is essential for guiding antibiotic therapy. However, distinguishing BP from non-bacterial pneumonia (NBP) using computed tomography (CT) is challenging due to overlapping imaging features and limited biomarker specificity, often leading to delayed or empirical treatment. This study aimed to develop and evaluate MPMT-Pneumo, a multi-plane, multi-modal deep learning model, to improve BP versus NBP differentiation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: A total of 384 patients with microbiologically confirmed pneumonia (239 BP, 145 NBP) from two hospitals were included and divided into training and test sets. MPMT-Pneumo utilized a hybrid CNN-Transformer architecture to integrate features from axial, coronal, sagittal CT views and four routine inflammatory biomarkers (WBC, ANC, CRP, PCT). Poly Focal Loss addressed class imbalance during training. Performance was evaluated using Area Under the Curve (AUC), accuracy, and sensitivity on the test set. MPMT-Pneumo was benchmarked against recent deep learning models, biomarker-only models, and clinical radiologists' CT interpretations. Ablation studies assessed component contributions. RESULTS: MPMT-Pneumo achieved an AUC of 0.874, accuracy of 0.852, and sensitivity of 0.894 on the test set, outperforming baseline deep learning models and biomarker-only models. Sensitivity for BP detection surpassed that of less experienced radiologists and was comparable to the most experienced. Ablation studies confirmed the importance of both multi-plane imaging and biomarkers. CONCLUSION: MPMT-Pneumo provides a clinically applicable solution for BP classification and shows great potential in improving diagnostic accuracy and promoting more rational antibiotic use in clinical practice.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Tomography, X-Ray Computed
- Sensitivity and Specificity
- Retrospective Studies
- Radiography, Thoracic
- Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted
- Pneumonia, Bacterial
- Pneumonia
- Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
- Middle Aged
- Male
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- Tomography, X-Ray Computed
- Sensitivity and Specificity
- Retrospective Studies
- Radiography, Thoracic
- Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted
- Pneumonia, Bacterial
- Pneumonia
- Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
- Middle Aged
- Male