Do state-of-the-art deep learning methods accurately segment cardiac structures and diagnose pathologies on CMRI compared to expert analysis?
150 multi-equipments CMRI recordings with reference measurements and classification from two medical experts
State-of-the-art deep learning methods for segmenting the myocardium and the two ventricles as well as classifying pathologies
Expert analysis (reference measurements and classification from two medical experts)
Correlation score for the automatic extraction of clinical indices and accuracy for automatic diagnosissurrogate
Deep learning methods demonstrate high accuracy and correlation with expert analysis for automated cardiac MRI segmentation and diagnosis, opening the door to fully automatic analysis.
Delineation of the left ventricular cavity, myocardium, and right ventricle from cardiac magnetic resonance images (multi-slice 2-D cine MRI) is a common clinical task to establish diagnosis. The automation of the corresponding tasks has thus been the subject of intense research over the past decades. In this paper, we introduce the "Automatic Cardiac Diagnosis Challenge" dataset (ACDC), the largest publicly available and fully annotated dataset for the purpose of cardiac MRI (CMR) assessment. The dataset contains data from 150 multi-equipments CMRI recordings with reference measurements and classification from two medical experts. The overarching objective of this paper is to measure how far state-of-the-art deep learning methods can go at assessing CMRI, i.e., segmenting the myocardium and the two ventricles as well as classifying pathologies. In the wake of the 2017 MICCAI-ACDC challenge, we report results from deep learning methods provided by nine research groups for the segmentation task and four groups for the classification task. Results show that the best methods faithfully reproduce the expert analysis, leading to a mean value of 0.97 correlation score for the automatic extraction of clinical indices and an accuracy of 0.96 for automatic diagnosis. These results clearly open the door to highly accurate and fully automatic analysis of cardiac CMRI. We also identify scenarios for which deep learning methods are still failing. Both the dataset and detailed results are publicly available online, while the platform will remain open for new submissions.
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Olivier Bernard
Alain Lalande
Clément Zotti
IEEE Transactions on Medical Imaging
Stanford University
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
Inserm
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Bernard et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69daa241e6ab964fb083667a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1109/tmi.2018.2837502