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Automated pneumothorax triaging in chest X‐rays in the New Zealand population using deep‐learning algorithms.

Authors :
Feng, Sijing
Liu, Qixiu
Patel, Aakash
Bazai, Sibghat Ullah
Jin, Cheng‐Kai
Kim, Ji Soo
Sarrafzadeh, Mikal
Azzollini, Damian
Yeoh, Jason
Kim, Eve
Gordon, Simon
Jang‐Jaccard, Julian
Urschler, Martin
Barnard, Stuart
Fong, Amy
Simmers, Cameron
Tarr, Gregory P
Wilson, Ben
Source :
Journal of Medical Imaging & Radiation Oncology. Dec2022, Vol. 66 Issue 8, p1035-1043. 9p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Introduction: The primary aim was to develop convolutional neural network (CNN)‐based artificial intelligence (AI) models for pneumothorax classification and segmentation for automated chest X‐ray (CXR) triaging. A secondary aim was to perform interpretability analysis on the best‐performing candidate model to determine whether the model's predictions were susceptible to bias or confounding. Method: A CANDID‐PTX dataset, that included 19,237 anonymized and manually labelled CXRs, was used for training and testing candidate models for pneumothorax classification and segmentation. Evaluation metrics for classification performance included Area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC‐ROC), sensitivity and specificity, whilst segmentation performance was measured using mean Dice and true‐positive (TP)‐Dice coefficients. Interpretability analysis was performed using Grad‐CAM heatmaps. Finally, the best‐performing model was implemented for a triage simulation. Results: The best‐performing model demonstrated a sensitivity of 0.93, specificity of 0.95 and AUC‐ROC of 0.94 in identifying the presence of pneumothorax. A TP‐Dice coefficient of 0.69 is given for segmentation performance. In triage simulation, mean reporting delay for pneumothorax‐containing CXRs is reduced from 9.8 ± 2 days to 1.0 ± 0.5 days (P‐value < 0.001 at 5% significance level), with sensitivity 0.95 and specificity of 0.95 given for the classification performance. Finally, interpretability analysis demonstrated models employed logic understandable to radiologists, with negligible bias or confounding in predictions. Conclusion: AI models can automate pneumothorax detection with clinically acceptable accuracy, and potentially reduce reporting delays for urgent findings when implemented as triaging tools. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17549477
Volume :
66
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Medical Imaging & Radiation Oncology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160589505
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/1754-9485.13393