• Medientyp: E-Artikel
  • Titel: Automated Detection of Ischemic Stroke and Subsequent Patient Triage in Routinely Acquired Head CT
  • Beteiligte: Finck, Tom; Schinz, David; Grundl, Lioba; Eisawy, Rami; Yiğitsoy, Mehmet; Moosbauer, Julia; Zimmer, Claus; Pfister, Franz; Wiestler, Benedikt
  • Erschienen: Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022
  • Erschienen in: Clinical Neuroradiology, 32 (2022) 2, Seite 419-426
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • DOI: 10.1007/s00062-021-01081-7
  • ISSN: 1869-1439; 1869-1447
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  • Beschreibung: Abstract Purpose Advanced machine-learning (ML) techniques can potentially detect the entire spectrum of pathology through deviations from a learned norm. We investigated the utility of a weakly supervised ML tool to detect characteristic findings related to ischemic stroke in head CT and provide subsequent patient triage. Methods Patients having undergone non-enhanced head CT at a tertiary care hospital in April 2020 with either no anomalies, subacute or chronic ischemia, lacunar infarcts of the deep white matter or hyperdense vessel signs were retrospectively analyzed. Anomaly detection was performed using a weakly supervised ML classifier. Findings were displayed on a voxel-level (heatmap) and pooled to an anomaly score. Thresholds for this score classified patients into i) normal, ii) inconclusive, iii) pathological. Expert-validated radiological reports were considered as ground truth. Test assessment was performed with ROC analysis; inconclusive results were pooled to pathological predictions for accuracy measurements. Results During the investigation period 208 patients were referred for head CT of which 111 could be included. Definite ratings into normal/pathological were feasible in 77 (69.4%) patients. Based on anomaly scores, the AUC to differentiate normal from pathological scans was 0.98 (95% CI 0.97–1.00). The sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values were 100%, 40.6%, 80.6% and 100%, respectively. Conclusion Our study demonstrates the potential of a weakly supervised anomaly-detection tool to detect stroke findings in head CT. Definite classification into normal/pathological was made with high accuracy in > 2/3 of patients. Anomaly heatmaps further provide guidance towards pathologies, also in cases with inconclusive ratings.