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This is an open-source python package for the extraction of Radiomics features from medical imaging.
With this package we aim to establish a reference standard for Radiomic Analysis, and provide a tested and maintained open-source platform for easy and reproducible Radiomic Feature extraction. By doing so, we hope to increase awareness of radiomic capabilities and expand the community.
The platform supports both the feature extraction in 2D and 3D. Not intended for clinical use.
If you publish any work which uses this package, please cite the following publication: van Griethuysen, J. J. M., Fedorov, A., Parmar, C., Hosny, A., Aucoin, N., Narayan, V., Beets-Tan, R. G. H., Fillon-Robin, J. C., Pieper, S., Aerts, H. J. W. L. (2017). Computational Radiomics System to Decode the Radiographic Phenotype. Cancer Research, 77(21), e104–e107. https://doi.org/10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-17-0339
Join the PyRadiomics community on google groups here.
Currently supports the following feature classes:
- First Order Statistics
- Shape-based
- Gray Level Cooccurence Matrix (GLCM)
- Gray Level Run Length Matrix (GLRLM)
- Gray Level Size Zone Matrix (GLSZM)
- Gray Level Dependece Matrix (GLDM)
- Neighboring Gray Tone Difference Matrix (NGTDM)
Aside from the feature classes, there are also some built-in optional filters:
- Laplacian of Gaussian (LoG, based on SimpleITK functionality)
- Wavelet (using the PyWavelets package)
- Square
- Square Root
- Logarithm
- Exponential
- Gradient (Magnitude)
- Local Binary Pattern (LBP) 2D / 3D
Aside from calculating features, the pyradiomics package includes provenance information in the output. This information contains information on used image and mask, as well as applied settings and filters, thereby enabling fully reproducible feature extraction.
For more information, see the sphinx generated documentation available here.
Alternatively, you can generate the documentation by checking out the master branch and running from the root directory:
python setup.py build_sphinx
The documentation can then be viewed in a browser by opening PACKAGE_ROOT\build\sphinx\html\index.html
.
Furthermore, an instruction video is available here.
PyRadiomics is OS independent and compatible with both Python 2.7 and Python >=3.4 (64-bits). To install this package on unix like systems run the following commands from the root directory:
python -m pip install -r requirements.txt
python setup.py install
Detailed installation instructions, as well as instructions for installing PyRadiomics on Windows are available in the documentation.
PyRadiomics also supports Dockers. Currently, the only docker available is a Jupyter notebook with PyRadiomics pre-installed with example Notebooks. To build the Docker:
docker build -t radiomics/notebook .
The radiomics/notebook
Docker has an exposed volume (/data
) that can be mapped to the host system directory. For example, to mount the current directory:
docker run --rm -it --publish 8888:8888 -v `pwd`:/data radiomics/notebook
or for a less secure notebook, skip the randomly generated token
docker run --rm -it --publish 8888:8888 -v `pwd`:/data radiomics/notebook start-notebook.sh --NotebookApp.token=''
and open the local webpage at http://localhost:8888/ with the current directory at http://localhost:8888/tree/data.
PyRadiomics can be easily used in a Python script through the featureextractor
module. Furthermore, PyRadiomics provides two commandline scripts, pyradiomics
and pyradiomicsbatch
, for single image extraction and batchprocessing, respectively.
Finally, a convenient front-end interface is provided as the 'Radiomics'
extension for 3D Slicer, available here.
- SimpleITK (Image loading and preprocessing)
- numpy (Feature calculation)
- PyWavelets (Wavelet filter)
- pykwalify (Enabling yaml parameters file checking)
- six (Python 3 Compatibility)
See also the requirements file.
PyRadiomics is also available as an extension to 3D Slicer. Download and install the 3D slicer nightly build, the extension is then available in the extension manager under "SlicerRadiomics".
This package is covered by the open source 3-clause BSD License.
- Joost van Griethuysen1,3,4
- Andriy Fedorov2
- Nicole Aucoin2
- Jean-Christophe Fillion-Robin5
- Ahmed Hosny1
- Steve Pieper6
- Hugo Aerts (PI)1,2
1Department of Radiation Oncology, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 2Department of Radiology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 3Department of Radiology, Netherlands Cancer Institute, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 4GROW-School for Oncology and Developmental Biology, Maastricht University Medical Center, Maastricht, The Netherlands, 5Kitware, 6Isomics
We are happy to help you with any questions. Please contact us on the pyradiomics email list.
We welcome contributions to PyRadiomics. Please read the contributing guidelines on how to contribute to PyRadiomics.
This work was supported in part by the US National Cancer Institute grant 5U24CA194354, QUANTITATIVE RADIOMICS SYSTEM DECODING THE TUMOR PHENOTYPE.