High-quality annotations for deep learning enabled plaque analysis in SCAPIS cardiac computed tomography angiography
Journal article, 2023

Background: Plaque analysis with coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) is a promising tool to identify high risk of future coronary events. The analysis process is time-consuming, and requires highly trained readers. Deep learning models have proved to excel at similar tasks, however, training these models requires large sets of expert-annotated training data. The aims of this study were to generate a large, high-quality annotated CCTA dataset derived from Swedish CArdioPulmonary BioImage Study (SCAPIS), report the reproducibility of the annotation core lab and describe the plaque characteristics and their association with established risk factors. Methods and results: The coronary artery tree was manually segmented using semi-automatic software by four primary and one senior secondary reader. A randomly selected sample of 469 subjects, all with coronary plaques and stratified for cardiovascular risk using the Systematic Coronary Risk Evaluation (SCORE), were analyzed. The reproducibility study (n = 78) showed an agreement for plaque detection of 0.91 (0.84–0.97). The mean percentage difference for plaque volumes was −0.6% the mean absolute percentage difference 19.4% (CV 13.7%, ICC 0.94). There was a positive correlation between SCORE and total plaque volume (rho = 0.30, p < 0.001) and total low attenuation plaque volume (rho = 0.29, p < 0.001). Conclusions: We have generated a CCTA dataset with high-quality plaque annotations showing good reproducibility and an expected correlation between plaque features and cardiovascular risk. The stratified data sampling has enriched high-risk plaques making the data well suited as training, validation and test data for a fully automatic analysis tool based on deep learning.

Coronary plaque analysis

Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography

Deep Learning

Annotated dataset

Author

Erika Fagman

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

University of Gothenburg

Jennifer Alvén

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Signal Processing and Biomedical Engineering

University of Gothenburg

Johan Westerbergh

Uppsala Clinical Research Center

Pieter Kitslaar

Medis medical imaging systems bv

Michael Kercsik

Alingsås hospital

University of Gothenburg

Kerstin Cederlund

Karolinska Institutet

Olov Duvernoy

Uppsala University

Jan Engvall

Linköping University

Isabel Goncalves

Skåne University Hospital

Lund University

Hanna Markstad

Lund University

Ellen Ostenfeld

Lund University

Göran Bergström

University of Gothenburg

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Ola Hjelmgren

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

University of Gothenburg

Heliyon

24058440 (eISSN)

Vol. 9 5 e16058

Subject Categories

Cardiac and Cardiovascular Systems

Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Medical Imaging

Medical Image Processing

DOI

10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e16058

PubMed

37215775

More information

Latest update

5/30/2023