70 research outputs found
Developing retinal biomarkers of neurological disease: an analytical perspective
The inaccessibility of the brain poses a problem for neuroscience. Scientists have traditionally responded by developing biomarkers for brain physiology and disease. The retina is an attractive source of biomarkers since it shares many features with the brain. Some even describe the retina as a ‘window’ to the brain, implying that retinal signs are analogous to brain disease features. However, new analytical methods are needed to show whether or not retinal signs really are equivalent to brain abnormalities, since this requires greater evidence than direct associations between retina and brain. We, therefore propose a new way to think about, and test, how clearly one might see the brain through the retinal window, using cerebral malaria as a case study
Automated Detection of Vessel Abnormalities on Fluorescein Angiogram in Malarial Retinopathy
The detection and assessment of intravascular filling defects is important, because they may represent a process central to cerebral malaria pathogenesis: neurovascular sequestration. We have developed and validated a framework that can automatically detect intravascular filling defects in fluorescein angiogram images. It first employs a state-of-the-art segmentation approach to extract the vessels from images and then divide them into individual segments by geometrical analysis. A feature vector based on the intensity and shape of saliency maps is generated to represent the level of abnormality of each vessel segment. An AdaBoost classifier with weighted cost coefficient is trained to classify the vessel segments into normal and abnormal categories. To demonstrate its effectiveness, we apply this framework to 6,358 vessel segments in images from 10 patients with malarial retinopathy. The test sensitivity, specificity, accuracy, and area under curve (AUC) are 74.7%, 73.5%, 74.1% and 74.2% respectively when compared to the reference standard of human expert manual annotations. This performance is comparable to the agreement that we find between human observers of intravascular filling defects. Our method will be a powerful new tool for studying malarial retinopathy
Automated Detection of Leakage in Fluorescein Angiography Images with Application to Malarial Retinopathy
The detection and assessment of leakage in retinal fluorescein angiogram images is important for the management of a wide range of retinal diseases. We have developed a framework that can automatically detect three types of leakage (large focal, punctate focal, and vessel segment leakage) and validated it on images from patients with malarial retinopathy. This framework comprises three steps: vessel segmentation, saliency feature generation and leakage detection. We tested the effectiveness of this framework by applying it to images from 20 patients with large focal leak, 10 patients with punctate focal leak, and 5,846 vessel segments from 10 patients with vessel leakage. The sensitivity in detecting large focal, punctate focal and vessel segment leakage are 95%, 82% and 81%, respectively, when compared to manual annotation by expert human observers. Our framework has the potential to become a powerful new tool for studying malarial retinopathy, and other conditions involving retinal leakage
Guardians and research staff experiences and views about the consent process in hospital-based paediatric research studies in urban Malawi: A qualitative study
Background: Obtaining consent has become a standard way of respecting the patient’s rights and autonomy in clinical research. Ethical guidelines recommend that the child’s parent/s or authorised legal guardian provides informed consent for their child’s participation. However, obtaining informed consent in paediatric research is challenging. Parents become vulnerable because of stress related to their child’s illness. Understanding the views held by guardians and researchers about the consent process in Malawi, where there are limitations in health care access and research literacy will assist in developing appropriate consent guidelines.
Methods: We conducted 20 in-depth interviews with guardians of children and research staff who had participated in paediatric clinical trial and observational studies in acute and non-acute settings in the Southern Region of Malawi. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim, and thematically analysed. Interviews were compared across studies and settings to identify differences and similarities in participants’ views about informed consent processes. Data analysis was facilitated by NVIVO 11 software.
Results: All participants across study types and settings reported that they associated participating in research with therapeutic benefits. Substantial differences were noted in the decision-making process across study settings. Guardians from acute studies felt that the role of their spouses was neglected during consenting, while staff reported that they had problems obtaining consent from guardians when their partners were not present. Across all study types and settings, research staff reported that they emphasised the benefits more than the risks of the study to participants, due to pressure to recruit. Participants from non-acute settings were more likely to recall information shared during the consent process than participants in the acute setting.
Conclusion: The health care context, culture and research process influenced participants’ understanding of study information across study types and settings. We advise research managers or principal investigators to define minimum requirements that would not compromise the consent process and conduct study specific training for staff. The use of one size fits all consent process may not be ideal. More guidance is needed on how these differences can be incorporated during the consent process to improve understanding and delivery of consent
A method for quantifying sectoral optic disc pallor in fundus photographs and its association with peripapillary RNFL thickness
Purpose: To develop an automatic method of quantifying optic disc pallor in
fundus photographs and determine associations with peripapillary retinal nerve
fibre layer (pRNFL) thickness.
Methods: We used deep learning to segment the optic disc, fovea, and vessels
in fundus photographs, and measured pallor. We assessed the relationship
between pallor and pRNFL thickness derived from optical coherence tomography
scans in 118 participants. Separately, we used images diagnosed by clinical
inspection as pale (N=45) and assessed how measurements compared to healthy
controls (N=46). We also developed automatic rejection thresholds, and tested
the software for robustness to camera type, image format, and resolution.
Results: We developed software that automatically quantified disc pallor
across several zones in fundus photographs. Pallor was associated with pRNFL
thickness globally (\b{eta} = -9.81 (SE = 3.16), p < 0.05), in the temporal
inferior zone (\b{eta} = -29.78 (SE = 8.32), p < 0.01), with the nasal/temporal
ratio (\b{eta} = 0.88 (SE = 0.34), p < 0.05), and in the whole disc (\b{eta} =
-8.22 (SE = 2.92), p < 0.05). Furthermore, pallor was significantly higher in
the patient group. Lastly, we demonstrate the analysis to be robust to camera
type, image format, and resolution.
Conclusions: We developed software that automatically locates and quantifies
disc pallor in fundus photographs and found associations between pallor
measurements and pRNFL thickness.
Translational relevance: We think our method will be useful for the
identification, monitoring and progression of diseases characterized by disc
pallor/optic atrophy, including glaucoma, compression, and potentially in
neurodegenerative disorders.Comment: 44 pages, 20 figures, 7 tables, submitte
An open-source deep learning algorithm for efficient and fully-automatic analysis of the choroid in optical coherence tomography
Purpose: To develop an open-source, fully-automatic deep learning algorithm,
DeepGPET, for choroid region segmentation in optical coherence tomography (OCT)
data. Methods: We used a dataset of 715 OCT B-scans (82 subjects, 115 eyes)
from 3 clinical studies related to systemic disease. Ground truth segmentations
were generated using a clinically validated, semi-automatic choroid
segmentation method, Gaussian Process Edge Tracing (GPET). We finetuned a UNet
with MobileNetV3 backbone pre-trained on ImageNet. Standard segmentation
agreement metrics, as well as derived measures of choroidal thickness and area,
were used to evaluate DeepGPET, alongside qualitative evaluation from a
clinical ophthalmologist. Results: DeepGPET achieves excellent agreement with
GPET on data from 3 clinical studies (AUC=0.9994, Dice=0.9664; Pearson
correlation of 0.8908 for choroidal thickness and 0.9082 for choroidal area),
while reducing the mean processing time per image on a standard laptop CPU from
34.49s (15.09) using GPET to 1.25s (0.10) using DeepGPET. Both
methods performed similarly according to a clinical ophthalmologist, who
qualitatively judged a subset of segmentations by GPET and DeepGPET, based on
smoothness and accuracy of segmentations. Conclusions :DeepGPET, a
fully-automatic, open-source algorithm for choroidal segmentation, will enable
researchers to efficiently extract choroidal measurements, even for large
datasets. As no manual interventions are required, DeepGPET is less subjective
than semi-automatic methods and could be deployed in clinical practice without
necessitating a trained operator. DeepGPET addresses the lack of open-source,
fully-automatic and clinically relevant choroid segmentation algorithms, and
its subsequent public release will facilitate future choroidal research both in
ophthalmology and wider systemic health.Comment: 8 pages, 2 figures, 3 tables. Currently in submission to ARVO TVST
(Association for Research in Vision and Ophthalmology, Translational Vision
Science & Technology). GitHub link to codebase provided upon publicatio
PallorMetrics:Software for Automatically Quantifying Optic Disc Pallor in Fundus Photographs, and Associations With Peripapillary RNFL Thickness
Purpose: We sough to develop an automatic method of quantifying optic disc pallor in fundus photographs and determine associations with peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (pRNFL) thickness.Methods: We used deep learning to segment the optic disc, fovea, and vessels in fundus photographs, and measured pallor. We assessed the relationship between pallor and pRNFL thickness derived from optical coherence tomography scans in 118 participants. Separately, we used images diagnosed by clinical inspection as pale (n = 45) and assessed how measurements compared with healthy controls (n = 46). We also developed automatic rejection thresholds and tested the software for robustness to camera type, image format, and resolution.Results: We developed software that automatically quantified disc pallor across several zones in fundus photographs. Pallor was associated with pRNFL thickness globally (β = -9.81; standard error [SE] = 3.16; P < 0.05), in the temporal inferior zone (β = -29.78; SE = 8.32; P < 0.01), with the nasal/temporal ratio (β = 0.88; SE = 0.34; P < 0.05), and in the whole disc (β = -8.22; SE = 2.92; P < 0.05). Furthermore, pallor was significantly higher in the patient group. Last, we demonstrate the analysis to be robust to camera type, image format, and resolution.Conclusions: We developed software that automatically locates and quantifies disc pallor in fundus photographs and found associations between pallor measurements and pRNFL thickness.Translational Relevance: We think our method will be useful for the identification, monitoring, and progression of diseases characterized by disc pallor and optic atrophy, including glaucoma, compression, and potentially in neurodegenerative disorders.</p
PallorMetrics:Software for Automatically Quantifying Optic Disc Pallor in Fundus Photographs, and Associations With Peripapillary RNFL Thickness
Purpose: We sough to develop an automatic method of quantifying optic disc pallor in fundus photographs and determine associations with peripapillary retinal nerve fiber layer (pRNFL) thickness.Methods: We used deep learning to segment the optic disc, fovea, and vessels in fundus photographs, and measured pallor. We assessed the relationship between pallor and pRNFL thickness derived from optical coherence tomography scans in 118 participants. Separately, we used images diagnosed by clinical inspection as pale (n = 45) and assessed how measurements compared with healthy controls (n = 46). We also developed automatic rejection thresholds and tested the software for robustness to camera type, image format, and resolution.Results: We developed software that automatically quantified disc pallor across several zones in fundus photographs. Pallor was associated with pRNFL thickness globally (β = -9.81; standard error [SE] = 3.16; P < 0.05), in the temporal inferior zone (β = -29.78; SE = 8.32; P < 0.01), with the nasal/temporal ratio (β = 0.88; SE = 0.34; P < 0.05), and in the whole disc (β = -8.22; SE = 2.92; P < 0.05). Furthermore, pallor was significantly higher in the patient group. Last, we demonstrate the analysis to be robust to camera type, image format, and resolution.Conclusions: We developed software that automatically locates and quantifies disc pallor in fundus photographs and found associations between pallor measurements and pRNFL thickness.Translational Relevance: We think our method will be useful for the identification, monitoring, and progression of diseases characterized by disc pallor and optic atrophy, including glaucoma, compression, and potentially in neurodegenerative disorders.</p
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