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1.
Radiology ; 310(2): e231718, 2024 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38319169

ABSTRACT

Background There is clinical need to better quantify lung disease severity in pulmonary hypertension (PH), particularly in idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH) and PH associated with lung disease (PH-LD). Purpose To quantify fibrosis on CT pulmonary angiograms using an artificial intelligence (AI) model and to assess whether this approach can be used in combination with radiologic scoring to predict survival. Materials and Methods This retrospective multicenter study included adult patients with IPAH or PH-LD who underwent incidental CT imaging between February 2007 and January 2019. Patients were divided into training and test cohorts based on the institution of imaging. The test cohort included imaging examinations performed in 37 external hospitals. Fibrosis was quantified using an established AI model and radiologically scored by radiologists. Multivariable Cox regression adjusted for age, sex, World Health Organization functional class, pulmonary vascular resistance, and diffusing capacity of the lungs for carbon monoxide was performed. The performance of predictive models with or without AI-quantified fibrosis was assessed using the concordance index (C index). Results The training and test cohorts included 275 (median age, 68 years [IQR, 60-75 years]; 128 women) and 246 (median age, 65 years [IQR, 51-72 years]; 142 women) patients, respectively. Multivariable analysis showed that AI-quantified percentage of fibrosis was associated with an increased risk of patient mortality in the training cohort (hazard ratio, 1.01 [95% CI: 1.00, 1.02]; P = .04). This finding was validated in the external test cohort (C index, 0.76). The model combining AI-quantified fibrosis and radiologic scoring showed improved performance for predicting patient mortality compared with a model including radiologic scoring alone (C index, 0.67 vs 0.61; P < .001). Conclusion Percentage of lung fibrosis quantified on CT pulmonary angiograms by an AI model was associated with increased risk of mortality and showed improved performance for predicting patient survival when used in combination with radiologic severity scoring compared with radiologic scoring alone. © RSNA, 2024 Supplemental material is available for this article.


Subject(s)
Hypertension, Pulmonary , Pulmonary Fibrosis , Radiology , Adult , Aged , Female , Humans , Artificial Intelligence , Hypertension, Pulmonary/diagnostic imaging , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Retrospective Studies
2.
Artif Intell Med ; 143: 102610, 2023 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37673578

ABSTRACT

Automatic segmentation of the cardiac left ventricle with scars remains a challenging and clinically significant task, as it is essential for patient diagnosis and treatment pathways. This study aimed to develop a novel framework and cost function to achieve optimal automatic segmentation of the left ventricle with scars using LGE-MRI images. To ensure the generalization of the framework, an unbiased validation protocol was established using out-of-distribution (OOD) internal and external validation cohorts, and intra-observation and inter-observer variability ground truths. The framework employs a combination of traditional computer vision techniques and deep learning, to achieve optimal segmentation results. The traditional approach uses multi-atlas techniques, active contours, and k-means methods, while the deep learning approach utilizes various deep learning techniques and networks. The study found that the traditional computer vision technique delivered more accurate results than deep learning, except in cases where there was breath misalignment error. The optimal solution of the framework achieved robust and generalized results with Dice scores of 82.8 ± 6.4% and 72.1 ± 4.6% in the internal and external OOD cohorts, respectively. The developed framework offers a high-performance solution for automatic segmentation of the left ventricle with scars using LGE-MRI. Unlike existing state-of-the-art approaches, it achieves unbiased results across different hospitals and vendors without the need for training or tuning in hospital cohorts. This framework offers a valuable tool for experts to accomplish the task of fully automatic segmentation of the left ventricle with scars based on a single-modality cardiac scan.


Subject(s)
Artificial Intelligence , Deep Learning , Humans , Heart Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Cicatrix/diagnostic imaging , Computers
3.
Front Surg ; 10: 1245851, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37671031

ABSTRACT

Background: Augmented reality (AR) is increasingly being explored in neurosurgical practice. By visualizing patient-specific, three-dimensional (3D) models in real time, surgeons can improve their spatial understanding of complex anatomy and pathology, thereby optimizing intra-operative navigation, localization, and resection. Here, we aimed to capture applications of AR in glioma surgery, their current status and future potential. Methods: A systematic review of the literature was conducted. This adhered to the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guideline. PubMed, Embase, and Scopus electronic databases were queried from inception to October 10, 2022. Leveraging the Population, Intervention, Comparison, Outcomes, and Study design (PICOS) framework, study eligibility was evaluated in the qualitative synthesis. Data regarding AR workflow, surgical application, and associated outcomes were then extracted. The quality of evidence was additionally examined, using hierarchical classes of evidence in neurosurgery. Results: The search returned 77 articles. Forty were subject to title and abstract screening, while 25 proceeded to full text screening. Of these, 22 articles met eligibility criteria and were included in the final review. During abstraction, studies were classified as "development" or "intervention" based on primary aims. Overall, AR was qualitatively advantageous, due to enhanced visualization of gliomas and critical structures, frequently aiding in maximal safe resection. Non-rigid applications were also useful in disclosing and compensating for intra-operative brain shift. Irrespective, there was high variance in registration methods and measurements, which considerably impacted projection accuracy. Most studies were of low-level evidence, yielding heterogeneous results. Conclusions: AR has increasing potential for glioma surgery, with capacity to positively influence the onco-functional balance. However, technical and design limitations are readily apparent. The field must consider the importance of consistency and replicability, as well as the level of evidence, to effectively converge on standard approaches that maximize patient benefit.

4.
Sci Rep ; 13(1): 3812, 2023 03 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36882484

ABSTRACT

Recent studies have recognized the importance of characterizing the extent of lung disease in pulmonary hypertension patients by using Computed Tomography. The trustworthiness of an artificial intelligence system is linked with the depth of the evaluation in functional, operational, usability, safety and validation dimensions. The safety and validation of an artificial tool is linked to the uncertainty estimation of the model's prediction. On the other hand, the functionality, operation and usability can be achieved by explainable deep learning approaches which can verify the learning patterns and use of the network from a generalized point of view. We developed an artificial intelligence framework to map the 3D anatomical models of patients with lung disease in pulmonary hypertension. To verify the trustworthiness of the framework we studied the uncertainty estimation of the network's prediction, and we explained the learning patterns of the network. Therefore, a new generalized technique combining local explainable and interpretable dimensionality reduction approaches (PCA-GradCam, PCA-Shape) was developed. Our open-source software framework was evaluated in unbiased validation datasets achieving accurate, robust and generalized results.


Subject(s)
Hypertension, Pulmonary , Lung Diseases , Radiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted , Humans , Artificial Intelligence , Hypertension, Pulmonary/diagnostic imaging , Hypertension, Pulmonary/etiology , Models, Anatomic , Software , Tomography, X-Ray Computed/methods , Lung/diagnostic imaging , Lung Diseases/complications , Lung Diseases/diagnosis
5.
Med Sci (Basel) ; 11(1)2023 02 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36976528

ABSTRACT

Coronary artery disease (CAD) remains a leading cause of mortality and morbidity worldwide, and it is associated with considerable economic burden. In an ageing, multimorbid population, it has become increasingly important to develop reliable, consistent, low-risk, non-invasive means of diagnosing CAD. The evolution of multiple cardiac modalities in this field has addressed this dilemma to a large extent, not only in providing information regarding anatomical disease, as is the case with coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), but also in contributing critical details about functional assessment, for instance, using stress cardiac magnetic resonance (S-CMR). The field of artificial intelligence (AI) is developing at an astounding pace, especially in healthcare. In healthcare, key milestones have been achieved using AI and machine learning (ML) in various clinical settings, from smartwatches detecting arrhythmias to retinal image analysis and skin cancer prediction. In recent times, we have seen an emerging interest in developing AI-based technology in the field of cardiovascular imaging, as it is felt that ML methods have potential to overcome some limitations of current risk models by applying computer algorithms to large databases with multidimensional variables, thus enabling the inclusion of complex relationships to predict outcomes. In this paper, we review the current literature on the various applications of AI in the assessment of CAD, with a focus on multimodality imaging, followed by a discussion on future perspectives and critical challenges that this field is likely to encounter as it continues to evolve in cardiology.


Subject(s)
Coronary Artery Disease , Humans , Coronary Artery Disease/diagnostic imaging , Artificial Intelligence , Tomography, X-Ray Computed , Computed Tomography Angiography , Magnetic Resonance Imaging
6.
Comput Med Imaging Graph ; 103: 102152, 2023 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36525769

ABSTRACT

Patients with myocardial infarction are at elevated risk of sudden cardiac death, and scar tissue arising from infarction is known to play a role. The accurate identification of scars therefore is crucial for risk assessment, quantification and guiding interventions. Typically, core scars and grey peripheral zones are identified by radiologists and clinicians based on cardiac late gadolinium enhancement magnetic resonance images (LGE-MRI). Scar regions from LGE-MRI vary in size, shape, heterogeneity, artifacts, and image resolution. Thus, manual segmentation is time consuming, and influenced by the observer's experience (bias effect). We propose a fully automatic framework that develops 3D anatomical models of the left ventricle with border zone and core scar regions that are free from bias effect. Our myocardium (SOCRATIS), border scar and core scar (BZ-SOCRATIS) segmentation pipelines were evaluated using internal and external validation datasets. The automatic myocardium segmentation framework performed a Dice score of 81.9% and 70.0% in the internal and external validation dataset. The automatic scar segmentation pipeline achieved a Dice score of 60.9% for the core scar segmentation and 43.7% for the border zone scar segmentation in the internal dataset and in the external dataset a Dice score of 44.2% for the core scar segmentation and 54.8% for the border scar segmentation respectively. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study outlining a fully automatic framework to develop 3D anatomical models of the left ventricle with border zone and core scar regions. Our method exhibits high performance without the need for training or tuning in an unseen cohort (unsupervised).


Subject(s)
Heart Ventricles , Myocardial Infarction , Humans , Heart Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Cicatrix/diagnostic imaging , Cicatrix/pathology , Contrast Media , Gadolinium , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods
7.
Front Cardiovasc Med ; 9: 983859, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36225963

ABSTRACT

Introduction: Computed tomography pulmonary angiography (CTPA) is an essential test in the work-up of suspected pulmonary vascular disease including pulmonary hypertension and pulmonary embolism. Cardiac and great vessel assessments on CTPA are based on visual assessment and manual measurements which are known to have poor reproducibility. The primary aim of this study was to develop an automated whole heart segmentation (four chamber and great vessels) model for CTPA. Methods: A nine structure semantic segmentation model of the heart and great vessels was developed using 200 patients (80/20/100 training/validation/internal testing) with testing in 20 external patients. Ground truth segmentations were performed by consultant cardiothoracic radiologists. Failure analysis was conducted in 1,333 patients with mixed pulmonary vascular disease. Segmentation was achieved using deep learning via a convolutional neural network. Volumetric imaging biomarkers were correlated with invasive haemodynamics in the test cohort. Results: Dice similarity coefficients (DSC) for segmented structures were in the range 0.58-0.93 for both the internal and external test cohorts. The left and right ventricle myocardium segmentations had lower DSC of 0.83 and 0.58 respectively while all other structures had DSC >0.89 in the internal test cohort and >0.87 in the external test cohort. Interobserver comparison found that the left and right ventricle myocardium segmentations showed the most variation between observers: mean DSC (range) of 0.795 (0.785-0.801) and 0.520 (0.482-0.542) respectively. Right ventricle myocardial volume had strong correlation with mean pulmonary artery pressure (Spearman's correlation coefficient = 0.7). The volume of segmented cardiac structures by deep learning had higher or equivalent correlation with invasive haemodynamics than by manual segmentations. The model demonstrated good generalisability to different vendors and hospitals with similar performance in the external test cohort. The failure rates in mixed pulmonary vascular disease were low (<3.9%) indicating good generalisability of the model to different diseases. Conclusion: Fully automated segmentation of the four cardiac chambers and great vessels has been achieved in CTPA with high accuracy and low rates of failure. DL volumetric biomarkers can potentially improve CTPA cardiac assessment and invasive haemodynamic prediction.

8.
Sci Rep ; 12(1): 18220, 2022 10 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36309547

ABSTRACT

There have been numerous risk tools developed to enable triaging of SARS-CoV-2 positive patients with diverse levels of complexity. Here we presented a simplified risk-tool based on minimal parameters and chest X-ray (CXR) image data that predicts the survival of adult SARS-CoV-2 positive patients at hospital admission. We analysed the NCCID database of patient blood variables and CXR images from 19 hospitals across the UK using multivariable logistic regression. The initial dataset was non-randomly split between development and internal validation dataset with 1434 and 310 SARS-CoV-2 positive patients, respectively. External validation of the final model was conducted on 741 Accident and Emergency (A&E) admissions with suspected SARS-CoV-2 infection from a separate NHS Trust. The LUCAS mortality score included five strongest predictors (Lymphocyte count, Urea, C-reactive protein, Age, Sex), which are available at any point of care with rapid turnaround of results. Our simple multivariable logistic model showed high discrimination for fatal outcome with the area under the receiving operating characteristics curve (AUC-ROC) in development cohort 0.765 (95% confidence interval (CI): 0.738-0.790), in internal validation cohort 0.744 (CI: 0.673-0.808), and in external validation cohort 0.752 (CI: 0.713-0.787). The discriminatory power of LUCAS increased slightly when including the CXR image data. LUCAS can be used to obtain valid predictions of mortality in patients within 60 days of SARS-CoV-2 RT-PCR results into low, moderate, high, or very high risk of fatality.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Adult , Humans , SARS-CoV-2 , C-Reactive Protein/analysis , Urea , X-Rays , Lymphocyte Count , Retrospective Studies
9.
Front Cardiovasc Med ; 9: 956811, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35911553

ABSTRACT

Background: There has been a rapid increase in the number of Artificial Intelligence (AI) studies of cardiac MRI (CMR) segmentation aiming to automate image analysis. However, advancement and clinical translation in this field depend on researchers presenting their work in a transparent and reproducible manner. This systematic review aimed to evaluate the quality of reporting in AI studies involving CMR segmentation. Methods: MEDLINE and EMBASE were searched for AI CMR segmentation studies in April 2022. Any fully automated AI method for segmentation of cardiac chambers, myocardium or scar on CMR was considered for inclusion. For each study, compliance with the Checklist for Artificial Intelligence in Medical Imaging (CLAIM) was assessed. The CLAIM criteria were grouped into study, dataset, model and performance description domains. Results: 209 studies published between 2012 and 2022 were included in the analysis. Studies were mainly published in technical journals (58%), with the majority (57%) published since 2019. Studies were from 37 different countries, with most from China (26%), the United States (18%) and the United Kingdom (11%). Short axis CMR images were most frequently used (70%), with the left ventricle the most commonly segmented cardiac structure (49%). Median compliance of studies with CLAIM was 67% (IQR 59-73%). Median compliance was highest for the model description domain (100%, IQR 80-100%) and lower for the study (71%, IQR 63-86%), dataset (63%, IQR 50-67%) and performance (60%, IQR 50-70%) description domains. Conclusion: This systematic review highlights important gaps in the literature of CMR studies using AI. We identified key items missing-most strikingly poor description of patients included in the training and validation of AI models and inadequate model failure analysis-that limit the transparency, reproducibility and hence validity of published AI studies. This review may support closer adherence to established frameworks for reporting standards and presents recommendations for improving the quality of reporting in this field. Systematic Review Registration: [www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/], identifier [CRD42022279214].

11.
Int J Mol Sci ; 23(13)2022 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35806273

ABSTRACT

Acute kidney injury (AKI) is a prevalent complication in severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) positive inpatients, which is linked to an increased mortality rate compared to patients without AKI. Here we analysed the difference in kidney blood biomarkers in SARS-CoV-2 positive patients with non-fatal or fatal outcome, in order to develop a mortality prediction model for hospitalised SARS-CoV-2 positive patients. A retrospective cohort study including data from suspected SARS-CoV-2 positive patients admitted to a large National Health Service (NHS) Foundation Trust hospital in the Yorkshire and Humber regions, United Kingdom, between 1 March 2020 and 30 August 2020. Hospitalised adult patients (aged ≥ 18 years) with at least one confirmed positive RT-PCR test for SARS-CoV-2 and blood tests of kidney biomarkers within 36 h of the RT-PCR test were included. The main outcome measure was 90-day in-hospital mortality in SARS-CoV-2 infected patients. The logistic regression and random forest (RF) models incorporated six predictors including three routine kidney function tests (sodium, urea; creatinine only in RF), along with age, sex, and ethnicity. The mortality prediction performance of the logistic regression model achieved an area under receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) curve of 0.772 in the test dataset (95% CI: 0.694-0.823), while the RF model attained the AUROC of 0.820 in the same test cohort (95% CI: 0.740-0.870). The resulting validated prediction model is the first to focus on kidney biomarkers specifically on in-hospital mortality over a 90-day period.


Subject(s)
Acute Kidney Injury , COVID-19 , Acute Kidney Injury/diagnosis , Acute Kidney Injury/etiology , Adult , Biomarkers , COVID-19/diagnosis , Hospital Mortality , Humans , Kidney , Retrospective Studies , SARS-CoV-2 , State Medicine
12.
Radiology ; 305(1): 68-79, 2022 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35699578

ABSTRACT

Background Cardiac MRI measurements have diagnostic and prognostic value in the evaluation of cardiopulmonary disease. Artificial intelligence approaches to automate cardiac MRI segmentation are emerging but require clinical testing. Purpose To develop and evaluate a deep learning tool for quantitative evaluation of cardiac MRI functional studies and assess its use for prognosis in patients suspected of having pulmonary hypertension. Materials and Methods A retrospective multicenter and multivendor data set was used to develop a deep learning-based cardiac MRI contouring model using a cohort of patients suspected of having cardiopulmonary disease from multiple pathologic causes. Correlation with same-day right heart catheterization (RHC) and scan-rescan repeatability was assessed in prospectively recruited participants. Prognostic impact was assessed using Cox proportional hazard regression analysis of 3487 patients from the ASPIRE (Assessing the Severity of Pulmonary Hypertension In a Pulmonary Hypertension Referral Centre) registry, including a subset of 920 patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension. The generalizability of the automatic assessment was evaluated in 40 multivendor studies from 32 centers. Results The training data set included 539 patients (mean age, 54 years ± 20 [SD]; 315 women). Automatic cardiac MRI measurements were better correlated with RHC parameters than were manual measurements, including left ventricular stroke volume (r = 0.72 vs 0.68; P = .03). Interstudy repeatability of cardiac MRI measurements was high for all automatic measurements (intraclass correlation coefficient range, 0.79-0.99) and similarly repeatable to manual measurements (all paired t test P > .05). Automated right ventricle and left ventricle cardiac MRI measurements were associated with mortality in patients suspected of having pulmonary hypertension. Conclusion An automatic cardiac MRI measurement approach was developed and tested in a large cohort of patients, including a broad spectrum of right ventricular and left ventricular conditions, with internal and external testing. Fully automatic cardiac MRI assessment correlated strongly with invasive hemodynamics, had prognostic value, were highly repeatable, and showed excellent generalizability. Clinical trial registration no. NCT03841344 Published under a CC BY 4.0 license. Online supplemental material is available for this article. See also the editorial by Ambale-Venkatesh and Lima in this issue. An earlier incorrect version appeared online. This article was corrected on June 27, 2022.


Subject(s)
Hypertension, Pulmonary , Artificial Intelligence , Cardiac Catheterization , Female , Heart Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Middle Aged , Retrospective Studies
13.
J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ; 24(1): 25, 2022 04 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35387651

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Right atrial (RA) area predicts mortality in patients with pulmonary hypertension, and is recommended by the European Society of Cardiology/European Respiratory Society pulmonary hypertension guidelines. The advent of deep learning may allow more reliable measurement of RA areas to improve clinical assessments. The aim of this study was to automate cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) RA area measurements and evaluate the clinical utility by assessing repeatability, correlation with invasive haemodynamics and prognostic value. METHODS: A deep learning RA area CMR contouring model was trained in a multicentre cohort of 365 patients with pulmonary hypertension, left ventricular pathology and healthy subjects. Inter-study repeatability (intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC)) and agreement of contours (DICE similarity coefficient (DSC)) were assessed in a prospective cohort (n = 36). Clinical testing and mortality prediction was performed in n = 400 patients that were not used in the training nor prospective cohort, and the correlation of automatic and manual RA measurements with invasive haemodynamics assessed in n = 212/400. Radiologist quality control (QC) was performed in the ASPIRE registry, n = 3795 patients. The primary QC observer evaluated all the segmentations and recorded them as satisfactory, suboptimal or failure. A second QC observer analysed a random subcohort to assess QC agreement (n = 1018). RESULTS: All deep learning RA measurements showed higher interstudy repeatability (ICC 0.91 to 0.95) compared to manual RA measurements (1st observer ICC 0.82 to 0.88, 2nd observer ICC 0.88 to 0.91). DSC showed high agreement comparing automatic artificial intelligence and manual CMR readers. Maximal RA area mean and standard deviation (SD) DSC metric for observer 1 vs observer 2, automatic measurements vs observer 1 and automatic measurements vs observer 2 is 92.4 ± 3.5 cm2, 91.2 ± 4.5 cm2 and 93.2 ± 3.2 cm2, respectively. Minimal RA area mean and SD DSC metric for observer 1 vs observer 2, automatic measurements vs observer 1 and automatic measurements vs observer 2 was 89.8 ± 3.9 cm2, 87.0 ± 5.8 cm2 and 91.8 ± 4.8 cm2. Automatic RA area measurements all showed moderate correlation with invasive parameters (r = 0.45 to 0.66), manual (r = 0.36 to 0.57). Maximal RA area could accurately predict elevated mean RA pressure low and high-risk thresholds (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve artificial intelligence = 0.82/0.87 vs manual = 0.78/0.83), and predicted mortality similar to manual measurements, both p < 0.01. In the QC evaluation, artificial intelligence segmentations were suboptimal at 108/3795 and a low failure rate of 16/3795. In a subcohort (n = 1018), agreement by two QC observers was excellent, kappa 0.84. CONCLUSION: Automatic artificial intelligence CMR derived RA size and function are accurate, have excellent repeatability, moderate associations with invasive haemodynamics and predict mortality.


Subject(s)
Artificial Intelligence , Hypertension, Pulmonary , Heart Ventricles , Humans , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy , Predictive Value of Tests , Prospective Studies , Reproducibility of Results
14.
Comput Med Imaging Graph ; 94: 102008, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34763146

ABSTRACT

The global pandemic of coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is continuing to have a significant effect on the well-being of the global population, thus increasing the demand for rapid testing, diagnosis, and treatment. As COVID-19 can cause severe pneumonia, early diagnosis is essential for correct treatment, as well as to reduce the stress on the healthcare system. Along with COVID-19, other etiologies of pneumonia and Tuberculosis (TB) constitute additional challenges to the medical system. Pneumonia (viral as well as bacterial) kills about 2 million infants every year and is consistently estimated as one of the most important factor of childhood mortality (according to the World Health Organization). Chest X-ray (CXR) and computed tomography (CT) scans are the primary imaging modalities for diagnosing respiratory diseases. Although CT scans are the gold standard, they are more expensive, time consuming, and are associated with a small but significant dose of radiation. Hence, CXR have become more widespread as a first line investigation. In this regard, the objective of this work is to develop a new deep transfer learning pipeline, named DenResCov-19, to diagnose patients with COVID-19, pneumonia, TB or healthy based on CXR images. The pipeline consists of the existing DenseNet-121 and the ResNet-50 networks. Since the DenseNet and ResNet have orthogonal performances in some instances, in the proposed model we have created an extra layer with convolutional neural network (CNN) blocks to join these two models together to establish superior performance as compared to the two individual networks. This strategy can be applied universally in cases where two competing networks are observed. We have tested the performance of our proposed network on two-class (pneumonia and healthy), three-class (COVID-19 positive, healthy, and pneumonia), as well as four-class (COVID-19 positive, healthy, TB, and pneumonia) classification problems. We have validated that our proposed network has been able to successfully classify these lung-diseases on our four datasets and this is one of our novel findings. In particular, the AUC-ROC are 99.60, 96.51, 93.70, 96.40% and the F1 values are 98.21, 87.29, 76.09, 83.17% on our Dataset X-Ray 1, 2, 3, and 4 (DXR1, DXR2, DXR3, DXR4), respectively.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Deep Learning , Pneumonia , Tuberculosis , Algorithms , Humans , Pneumonia/diagnostic imaging , SARS-CoV-2 , X-Rays
15.
Comput Med Imaging Graph ; 93: 101982, 2021 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34481237

ABSTRACT

Multi-atlas segmentation of cardiac regions and total infarct scar (MA-SOCRATIS) is an unsupervised automatic pipeline to segment left ventricular myocardium and scar from late gadolinium enhanced MR images (LGE-MRI) of the heart. We implement two different pipelines for myocardial and scar segmentation from short axis LGE-MRI. Myocardial segmentation has two steps; initial segmentation and re-estimation. The initial segmentation step makes a first estimate of myocardium boundaries by using multi-atlas segmentation techniques. The re-estimation step refines the myocardial segmentation by a combination of k-means clustering and a geometric median shape variation technique. An active contour technique determines the unhealthy and healthy myocardial wall. The scar segmentation pipeline is a combination of a Rician-Gaussian mixture model and full width at half maximum (FWHM) thresholding, to determine the intensity pixels in scar regions. Following this step a watershed method with an automatic seed-points framework segments the final scar region. MA-SOCRATIS was evaluated using two different datasets. In both datasets ground truths were based on manual segmentation of short axis images from LGE-MRI scans. The first dataset included 40 patients from the MS-CMRSeg 2019 challenge dataset (STACOM at MICCAI 2019). The second is a collection of 20 patients with scar regions that are challenging to segment. MA-SOCRATIS achieved robust and accurate performance in automatic segmentation of myocardium and scar regions without the need of training or tuning in both cohorts, compared with state-of-the-art techniques (intra-observer and inter observer myocardium segmentation: 81.9% and 70% average Dice value, and scar (intra-observer and inter observer segmentation: 70.5% and 70.5% average Dice value).


Subject(s)
Heart Ventricles , Myocardial Infarction , Cicatrix/diagnostic imaging , Cicatrix/pathology , Gadolinium , Heart Ventricles/diagnostic imaging , Heart Ventricles/pathology , Humans , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Myocardial Infarction/diagnostic imaging
16.
Int Immunopharmacol ; 86: 106705, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32652499

ABSTRACT

Since December 2019 the novel coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 has been identified as the cause of the pandemic COVID-19. Early symptoms overlap with other common conditions such as common cold and Influenza, making early screening and diagnosis are crucial goals for health practitioners. The aim of the study was to use machine learning (ML), an artificial neural network (ANN) and a simple statistical test to identify SARS-CoV-2 positive patients from full blood counts without knowledge of symptoms or history of the individuals. The dataset included in the analysis and training contains anonymized full blood counts results from patients seen at the Hospital Israelita Albert Einstein, at São Paulo, Brazil, and who had samples collected to perform the SARS-CoV-2 rt-PCR test during a visit to the hospital. Patient data was anonymised by the hospital, clinical data was standardized to have a mean of zero and a unit standard deviation. This data was made public with the aim to allow researchers to develop ways to enable the hospital to rapidly predict and potentially identify SARS-CoV-2 positive patients. We find that with full blood counts random forest, shallow learning and a flexible ANN model predict SARS-CoV-2 patients with high accuracy between populations on regular wards (AUC = 94-95%) and those not admitted to hospital or in the community (AUC = 80-86%). Here, AUC is the Area Under the receiver operating characteristics Curve and a measure for model performance. Moreover, a simple linear combination of 4 blood counts can be used to have an AUC of 85% for patients within the community. The normalised data of different blood parameters from SARS-CoV-2 positive patients exhibit a decrease in platelets, leukocytes, eosinophils, basophils and lymphocytes, and an increase in monocytes. SARS-CoV-2 positive patients exhibit a characteristic immune response profile pattern and changes in different parameters measured in the full blood count that are detected from simple and rapid blood tests. While symptoms at an early stage of infection are known to overlap with other common conditions, parameters of the full blood counts can be analysed to distinguish the viral type at an earlier stage than current rt-PCR tests for SARS-CoV-2 allow at present. This new methodology has potential to greatly improve initial screening for patients where PCR based diagnostic tools are limited.


Subject(s)
Betacoronavirus/immunology , Blood Cell Count , Clinical Laboratory Techniques/methods , Coronavirus Infections/diagnosis , Machine Learning , Pneumonia, Viral/diagnosis , Brazil , COVID-19 , COVID-19 Testing , Coronavirus Infections/blood , Coronavirus Infections/immunology , Coronavirus Infections/virology , Datasets as Topic , Humans , Mass Screening/methods , Models, Statistical , Neural Networks, Computer , Pandemics , Pneumonia, Viral/blood , Pneumonia, Viral/immunology , Pneumonia, Viral/virology , Prognosis , ROC Curve , SARS-CoV-2
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