Back to Search Start Over

105 Machine learning and carotid artery CT radiomics identify significant differences between culprit and non-culprit lesions in patients with stroke and transient ischaemic attack

Authors :
Jason M. Tarkin
Carola-Bibiane Schönlieb
Nick Evans
Leonardo Rundo
Mohammed M. Chowdhury
Elizabeth P.V. Le
Evis Sala
Jonathan R. Weir-McCall
James H.F. Rudd
Christopher Wall
Elizabeth A. Warburton
Yuan Huang
Holly Pavey
Fulvio Zaccagna
Source :
Imaging.
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd and British Cardiovascular Society, 2020.

Abstract

Introduction Carotid atherosclerosis is the main cause of ischaemic stroke. Texture analysis is a radiomic approach used to quantify image heterogeneity which can predict tumour aggression in oncology. We investigated whether this method could be applied to carotid artery disease to differentiate symptomatic from asymptomatic patients and culprit from non-culprit plaques, and then whether machine learning (ML) could correctly classify plaques based on these features. Methods CT angiography (CTA) images from symptomatic patients with carotid artery-related cerebrovascular accidents (CVAs) and from asymptomatic (ASX) patients were studied. Regions-of-interest (ROIs) were drawn on 14 consecutive carotid artery CTA slices with 3mm slice thickness. PyRadiomics was used for isotropic image (1x1x1) resampling and normalisation prior to texture feature extraction from 6 different classes (Table 1). Asymptomatic carotids were compared to culprit carotids (CC), and non-culprit (NC) carotids using the Mann Whitney U test or Wilcoxon signed-rank tests as appropriate, with a p-value Results The dataset comprised 82 carotid arteries from 41 symptomatic patients (41 culprit; 41 non-culprit) and 50 carotid arteries from 25 asymptomatic patients. CC and NC carotids showed significant differences in both first- and second-order features (IH Median: CC 618 (61); NC 646 (97), p Conclusions Textural analysis combined with machine learning on carotid CT scans reveals highly significant differences between symptomatic and asymptomatic patients, and between culprit and non-culprit carotid arteries within symptomatic patients. This approach could help identify patients at high-risk of stroke for aggressive medical therapy and surveillance. Conflict of Interest None

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........90ad769833c63659e62e085c18b68764