Identification of coronary calcifications in optical coherence tomography imaging using deep learning

Abstract Coronary calcifications are an obstacle for successful percutaneous treatment of coronary artery disease patients. The optimal method for delineating calcifications extent is coronary optical coherence tomography (OCT). To identify calcification on OCT and subsequently tailor the appropriat...

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Auteurs principaux: Yarden Avital, Akiva Madar, Shlomi Arnon, Edward Koifman
Format: article
Langue:EN
Publié: Nature Portfolio 2021
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Accès en ligne:https://doaj.org/article/2347b670f0914ebb8467a552cfaa9f95
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Résumé:Abstract Coronary calcifications are an obstacle for successful percutaneous treatment of coronary artery disease patients. The optimal method for delineating calcifications extent is coronary optical coherence tomography (OCT). To identify calcification on OCT and subsequently tailor the appropriate treatment, requires expertise in both image acquisition and interpretation. Image acquisition consists from system calibration, blood clearance by a contrast agent along with synchronization of the pullback process. Accurate interpretation demands careful review by the operator of a segment of 50–75 mm of the coronary vessel at steps of 5–10 frames per mm accounting for 375–540 images in each OCT run, which is time consuming and necessitates some expertise in OCT analysis. In this paper we developed a new deep learning algorithm to assist the physician to identify and quantify coronary calcifications promptly, efficiently and accurately. Our algorithm achieves an accuracy of 0.9903 ± 0.009 over the test set at size of 1500 frames and even managed to find calcifications that were not recognized manually by the physician. For the best knowledge of the authors our algorithm achieves high accuracy which was never achieved in the past.