4.5 Article

A deep learning approach for fully automated cardiac shape modeling in tetralogy of Fallot

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12968-023-00924-1

Keywords

Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR); Image segmentation; Deep learning; Shape modeling; Congenital heart disease

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Researchers have developed a fully automated pipeline for cardiac shape modeling using deep learning, which significantly reduces the manual input and time required. This approach enables the rapid analysis of large-scale datasets and has potential applications in clinical settings.
BackgroundCardiac shape modeling is a useful computational tool that has provided quantitative insights into the mechanisms underlying dysfunction in heart disease. The manual input and time required to make cardiac shape models, however, limits their clinical utility. Here we present an end-to-end pipeline that uses deep learning for automated view classification, slice selection, phase selection, anatomical landmark localization, and myocardial image segmentation for the automated generation of three-dimensional, biventricular shape models. With this approach, we aim to make cardiac shape modeling a more robust and broadly applicable tool that has processing times consistent with clinical workflows.MethodsCardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) images from a cohort of 123 patients with repaired tetralogy of Fallot (rTOF) from two internal sites were used to train and validate each step in the automated pipeline. The complete automated pipeline was tested using CMR images from a cohort of 12 rTOF patients from an internal site and 18 rTOF patients from an external site. Manually and automatically generated shape models from the test set were compared using Euclidean projection distances, global ventricular measurements, and atlas-based shape mode scores.ResultsThe mean absolute error (MAE) between manually and automatically generated shape models in the test set was similar to the voxel resolution of the original CMR images for end-diastolic models (MAE = 1.9 +/- 0.5 mm) and end-systolic models (MAE = 2.1 +/- 0.7 mm). Global ventricular measurements computed from automated models were in good agreement with those computed from manual models. The average mean absolute difference in shape mode Z-score between manually and automatically generated models was 0.5 standard deviations for the first 20 modes of a reference statistical shape atlas.ConclusionsUsing deep learning, accurate three-dimensional, biventricular shape models can be reliably created. This fully automated end-to-end approach dramatically reduces the manual input required to create shape models, thereby enabling the rapid analysis of large-scale datasets and the potential to deploy statistical atlas-based analyses in point-of-care clinical settings. Training data and networks are available from cardiacatlas.org.

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