Literature DB >> 27138584

Automatic coronary artery calcium scoring in cardiac CT angiography using paired convolutional neural networks.

Jelmer M Wolterink1, Tim Leiner2, Bob D de Vos3, Robbert W van Hamersvelt4, Max A Viergever5, Ivana Išgum6.   

Abstract

The amount of coronary artery calcification (CAC) is a strong and independent predictor of cardiovascular events. CAC is clinically quantified in cardiac calcium scoring CT (CSCT), but it has been shown that cardiac CT angiography (CCTA) may also be used for this purpose. We present a method for automatic CAC quantification in CCTA. This method uses supervised learning to directly identify and quantify CAC without a need for coronary artery extraction commonly used in existing methods. The study included cardiac CT exams of 250 patients for whom both a CCTA and a CSCT scan were available. To restrict the volume-of-interest for analysis, a bounding box around the heart is automatically determined. The bounding box detection algorithm employs a combination of three ConvNets, where each detects the heart in a different orthogonal plane (axial, sagittal, coronal). These ConvNets were trained using 50 cardiac CT exams. In the remaining 200 exams, a reference standard for CAC was defined in CSCT and CCTA. Out of these, 100 CCTA scans were used for training, and the remaining 100 for evaluation of a voxel classification method for CAC identification. The method uses ConvPairs, pairs of convolutional neural networks (ConvNets). The first ConvNet in a pair identifies voxels likely to be CAC, thereby discarding the majority of non-CAC-like voxels such as lung and fatty tissue. The identified CAC-like voxels are further classified by the second ConvNet in the pair, which distinguishes between CAC and CAC-like negatives. Given the different task of each ConvNet, they share their architecture, but not their weights. Input patches are either 2.5D or 3D. The ConvNets are purely convolutional, i.e. no pooling layers are present and fully connected layers are implemented as convolutions, thereby allowing efficient voxel classification. The performance of individual 2.5D and 3D ConvPairs with input sizes of 15 and 25 voxels, as well as the performance of ensembles of these ConvPairs, were evaluated by a comparison with reference annotations in CCTA and CSCT. In all cases, ensembles of ConvPairs outperformed their individual members. The best performing individual ConvPair detected 72% of lesions in the test set, with on average 0.85 false positive (FP) errors per scan. The best performing ensemble combined all ConvPairs and obtained a sensitivity of 71% at 0.48 FP errors per scan. For this ensemble, agreement with the reference mass score in CSCT was excellent (ICC 0.944 [0.918-0.962]). Aditionally, based on the Agatston score in CCTA, this ensemble assigned 83% of patients to the same cardiovascular risk category as reference CSCT. In conclusion, CAC can be accurately automatically identified and quantified in CCTA using the proposed pattern recognition method. This might obviate the need to acquire a dedicated CSCT scan for CAC scoring, which is regularly acquired prior to a CCTA, and thus reduce the CT radiation dose received by patients.
Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Automatic calcium scoring; Cardiac CT angiography; Convolutional neural network; Coronary artery calcifications

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27138584     DOI: 10.1016/j.media.2016.04.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Image Anal        ISSN: 1361-8415            Impact factor:   8.545


  44 in total

1.  Muscle segmentation in axial computed tomography (CT) images at the lumbar (L3) and thoracic (T4) levels for body composition analysis.

Authors:  Setareh Dabiri; Karteek Popuri; Elizabeth M Cespedes Feliciano; Bette J Caan; Vickie E Baracos; Mirza Faisal Beg
Journal:  Comput Med Imaging Graph       Date:  2019-05-09       Impact factor: 4.790

2.  Automated Segmentation of Tissues Using CT and MRI: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Leon Lenchik; Laura Heacock; Ashley A Weaver; Robert D Boutin; Tessa S Cook; Jason Itri; Christopher G Filippi; Rao P Gullapalli; James Lee; Marianna Zagurovskaya; Tara Retson; Kendra Godwin; Joey Nicholson; Ponnada A Narayana
Journal:  Acad Radiol       Date:  2019-08-10       Impact factor: 3.173

Review 3.  Artificial Intelligence in Cardiovascular Imaging: JACC State-of-the-Art Review.

Authors:  Damini Dey; Piotr J Slomka; Paul Leeson; Dorin Comaniciu; Sirish Shrestha; Partho P Sengupta; Thomas H Marwick
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2019-03-26       Impact factor: 24.094

Review 4.  Cardiac imaging: working towards fully-automated machine analysis & interpretation.

Authors:  Piotr J Slomka; Damini Dey; Arkadiusz Sitek; Manish Motwani; Daniel S Berman; Guido Germano
Journal:  Expert Rev Med Devices       Date:  2017-03       Impact factor: 3.166

Review 5.  Extraction of Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaques From Computed Tomography Imaging: A Review of Recent Methods.

Authors:  Haipeng Liu; Aleksandra Wingert; Jian'an Wang; Jucheng Zhang; Xinhong Wang; Jianzhong Sun; Fei Chen; Syed Ghufran Khalid; Jun Jiang; Dingchang Zheng
Journal:  Front Cardiovasc Med       Date:  2021-02-10

6.  Machine learning to predict the long-term risk of myocardial infarction and cardiac death based on clinical risk, coronary calcium, and epicardial adipose tissue: a prospective study.

Authors:  Frederic Commandeur; Piotr J Slomka; Markus Goeller; Xi Chen; Sebastien Cadet; Aryabod Razipour; Priscilla McElhinney; Heidi Gransar; Stephanie Cantu; Robert J H Miller; Alan Rozanski; Stephan Achenbach; Balaji K Tamarappoo; Daniel S Berman; Damini Dey
Journal:  Cardiovasc Res       Date:  2020-12-01       Impact factor: 10.787

7.  On the Relevance of the Loss Function in the Agatston Score Regression from Non-ECG Gated CT Scans.

Authors:  Carlos Cano-Espinosa; Germán González; George R Washko; Miguel Cazorla; Raúl San José Estépar
Journal:  Image Anal Mov Organ Breast Thorac Images (2018)       Date:  2018-09-12

Review 8.  Machine Learning and Deep Neural Networks in Thoracic and Cardiovascular Imaging.

Authors:  Tara A Retson; Alexandra H Besser; Sean Sall; Daniel Golden; Albert Hsiao
Journal:  J Thorac Imaging       Date:  2019-05       Impact factor: 3.000

9.  Biomarker Localization From Deep Learning Regression Networks.

Authors:  Carlos Cano-Espinosa; German Gonzalez; George R Washko; Miguel Cazorla; Raul San Jose Estepar
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2020-01-09       Impact factor: 10.048

10.  Deep Learning for Quantification of Epicardial and Thoracic Adipose Tissue From Non-Contrast CT.

Authors:  Frederic Commandeur; Markus Goeller; Julian Betancur; Sebastien Cadet; Mhairi Doris; Xi Chen; Daniel S Berman; Piotr J Slomka; Balaji K Tamarappoo; Damini Dey
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2018-02-09       Impact factor: 10.048

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