Affiliation:
1. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Istanbul Cerrahpaşa University, 34320 Istanbul, Turkey
2. Informatics Department, İstanbul University, 34134 Istanbul, Turkey
3. Institute of Cyber Security for Society (iCSS) & School of Computing, University of Kent, Canterbury CT2 7NP, UK
4. Gastroenterology Department, Van Education and Research Hospital, 65300 Van, Turkey
Abstract
Background: Celiac disease arises from gluten consumption and shares symptoms with other conditions, leading to delayed diagnoses. Untreated celiac disease heightens the risk of autoimmune disorders, neurological issues, and certain cancers like lymphoma while also impacting skin health due to intestinal disruptions. This study uses facial photos to distinguish individuals with celiac disease from those without. Surprisingly, there is a lack of research involving transfer learning for this purpose despite its benefits such as faster training, enhanced performance, and reduced overfitting. While numerous studies exist on endoscopic intestinal photo classification and a few have explored the link between facial morphology measurements and celiac disease, none have concentrated on diagnosing celiac disease through facial photo classification. Methods: This study sought to apply transfer learning techniques with VGG16 to address a gap in research by identifying distinct facial features that differentiate patients with celiac disease from healthy individuals. A dataset containing a total of 200 facial images of adult individuals with and without celiac condition was utilized. Half of the dataset had a ratio of 70% females to 30% males with celiac condition, and the rest had a ratio of 60% females to 40% males without celiac condition. Among those with celiac condition, 28 were newly diagnosed and 72 had been previously diagnosed, with 25 not adhering to a gluten-free diet and 47 partially adhering to such a diet. Results: Utilizing transfer learning, the model achieved a 73% accuracy in classifying the facial images of the patients during testing, with corresponding precision, recall, and F1 score values of 0.54, 0.56, and 0.52, respectively. The training process involved 50,178 parameters, showcasing the model’s efficacy in diagnostic image analysis. Conclusions: The model correctly classified approximately three-quarters of the test images. While this is a reasonable level of accuracy, it also suggests that there is room for improvement as the dataset contains images that are inherently difficult to classify even for humans. Increasing the proportion of newly diagnosed patients in the dataset and expanding the dataset size could notably improve the model’s efficacy. Despite being the first study in this field, further refinement holds promise for the development of a diagnostic tool for celiac disease using transfer learning in medical image analysis, addressing the lack of prior studies in this area.
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