4.6 Article

Point-of-care AI-assisted stepwise ultrasound pneumothorax diagnosis

Journal

PHYSICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY
Volume 68, Issue 20, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1361-6560/acfb70

Keywords

pneumothorax; ultrasound; stepwise deep learning; lung sliding classification

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This paper proposes a framework for diagnosing pneumothorax using artificial intelligence (AI) assistance in lung ultrasound scans. The framework follows the steps of skilled physicians and utilizes two deep learning models for quality assurance, ROI regression, and lung sliding classification. The results show high precision and real-time inferences.
Objective. Ultrasound is extensively utilized as a convenient and cost-effective method in emergency situations. Unfortunately, the limited availability of skilled clinicians in emergency hinders the wider adoption of point-of-care ultrasound. To overcome this challenge, this paper aims to aid less experienced healthcare providers in emergency lung ultrasound scans. Approach. To assist healthcare providers, it is important to have a comprehensive model that can automatically guide the entire process of lung ultrasound based on the clinician's workflow. In this paper, we propose a framework for diagnosing pneumothorax using artificial intelligence (AI) assistance. Specifically, the proposed framework for lung ultrasound scan follows the steps taken by skilled physicians. It begins with finding the appropriate transducer position on the chest to locate the pleural line accurately in B-mode. The next step involves acquiring temporal M-mode data to determine the presence of lung sliding, a crucial indicator for pneumothorax. To mimic the sequential process of clinicians, two DL models were developed. The first model focuses on quality assurance (QA) and regression of the pleural line region-of-interest, while the second model classifies lung sliding. To achieve the inference on a mobile device, a size of EfficientNet-Lite0 model was further reduced to have fewer than 3 million parameters. Main results. The results showed that both the QA and lung sliding classification models achieved over 95% in area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUC), while the ROI performance reached 89% in the dice similarity coefficient. The entire stepwise pipeline was simulated using retrospective data, yielding an AUC of 89%. Significance. The step-wise AI framework for the pneumothorax diagnosis with QA offers an intelligible guide for each clinical workflow, which achieved significantly high precision and real-time inferences.

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