Development of novel machine learning model for right ventricular quantification on echocardiography-A multimodality validation study. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • PURPOSE: Echocardiography (echo) is widely used for right ventricular (RV) assessment. Current techniques for RV evaluation require additional imaging and manual analysis; machine learning (ML) approaches have the potential to provide efficient, fully automated quantification of RV function. METHODS: An automated ML model was developed to track the tricuspid annulus on echo using a convolutional neural network approach. The model was trained using 7791 image frames, and automated linear and circumferential indices quantifying annular displacement were generated. Automated indices were compared to an independent reference of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) defined RV dysfunction (RVEF < 50%). RESULTS: A total of 101 patients prospectively underwent echo and CMR: Fully automated annular tracking was uniformly successful; analyses entailed minimal processing time (<1 second for all) and no user editing. Findings demonstrate all automated annular shortening indices to be lower among patients with CMR-quantified RV dysfunction (all P < .001). Magnitude of ML annular displacement decreased stepwise in relation to population-based tertiles of TAPSE, with similar results when ML analyses were localized to the septal or lateral annulus (all P ≤ .001). Automated segmentation techniques provided good diagnostic performance (AUC 0.69-0.73) in relation to CMR reference and compared to conventional RV indices (TAPSE and S') with high negative predictive value (NPV 84%-87% vs 83%-88%). Reproducibility was higher for ML algorithm as compared to manual segmentation with zero inter- and intra-observer variability and ICC 1.0 (manual ICC: 0.87-0.91). CONCLUSIONS: This study provides an initial validation of a deep learning system for RV assessment using automated tracking of the tricuspid annulus.

publication date

  • May 12, 2020

Research

keywords

  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine
  • Ventricular Dysfunction, Right

Identity

PubMed Central ID

  • PMC7383774

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85084415058

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1111/echo.14674

PubMed ID

  • 32396705

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 37

issue

  • 5