1,919 research outputs found

    Supervised machine learning based multi-task artificial intelligence classification of retinopathies

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    Artificial intelligence (AI) classification holds promise as a novel and affordable screening tool for clinical management of ocular diseases. Rural and underserved areas, which suffer from lack of access to experienced ophthalmologists may particularly benefit from this technology. Quantitative optical coherence tomography angiography (OCTA) imaging provides excellent capability to identify subtle vascular distortions, which are useful for classifying retinovascular diseases. However, application of AI for differentiation and classification of multiple eye diseases is not yet established. In this study, we demonstrate supervised machine learning based multi-task OCTA classification. We sought 1) to differentiate normal from diseased ocular conditions, 2) to differentiate different ocular disease conditions from each other, and 3) to stage the severity of each ocular condition. Quantitative OCTA features, including blood vessel tortuosity (BVT), blood vascular caliber (BVC), vessel perimeter index (VPI), blood vessel density (BVD), foveal avascular zone (FAZ) area (FAZ-A), and FAZ contour irregularity (FAZ-CI) were fully automatically extracted from the OCTA images. A stepwise backward elimination approach was employed to identify sensitive OCTA features and optimal-feature-combinations for the multi-task classification. For proof-of-concept demonstration, diabetic retinopathy (DR) and sickle cell retinopathy (SCR) were used to validate the supervised machine leaning classifier. The presented AI classification methodology is applicable and can be readily extended to other ocular diseases, holding promise to enable a mass-screening platform for clinical deployment and telemedicine.Comment: Supplemental material attached at the en

    Multi-scale convolutional neural network for automated AMD classification using retinal OCT images

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    BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Age-related macular degeneration (AMD) is the most common cause of blindness in developed countries, especially in people over 60 years of age. The workload of specialists and the healthcare system in this field has increased in recent years mainly due to three reasons: 1) increased use of retinal optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging technique, 2) prevalence of population aging worldwide, and 3) chronic nature of AMD. Recent advancements in the field of deep learning have provided a unique opportunity for the development of fully automated diagnosis frameworks. Considering the presence of AMD-related retinal pathologies in varying sizes in OCT images, our objective was to propose a multi-scale convolutional neural network (CNN) that can capture inter-scale variations and improve performance using a feature fusion strategy across convolutional blocks. METHODS: Our proposed method introduces a multi-scale CNN based on the feature pyramid network (FPN) structure. This method is used for the reliable diagnosis of normal and two common clinical characteristics of dry and wet AMD, namely drusen and choroidal neovascularization (CNV). The proposed method is evaluated on the national dataset gathered at Hospital (NEH) for this study, consisting of 12649 retinal OCT images from 441 patients, and the UCSD public dataset, consisting of 108312 OCT images from 4686 patients. RESULTS: Experimental results show the superior performance of our proposed multi-scale structure over several well-known OCT classification frameworks. This feature combination strategy has proved to be effective on all tested backbone models, with improvements ranging from 0.4% to 3.3%. In addition, gradual learning has proved to be effective in improving performance in two consecutive stages. In the first stage, the performance was boosted from 87.2%±2.5% to 92.0%±1.6% using pre-trained ImageNet weights. In the second stage, another performance boost from 92.0%±1.6% to 93.4%±1.4% was observed as a result of fine-tuning the previous model on the UCSD dataset. Lastly, generating heatmaps provided additional proof for the effectiveness of our multi-scale structure, enabling the detection of retinal pathologies appearing in different sizes. CONCLUSION: The promising quantitative results of the proposed architecture, along with qualitative evaluations through generating heatmaps, prove the suitability of the proposed method to be used as a screening tool in healthcare centers assisting ophthalmologists in making better diagnostic decisions
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