Purpose: Quantitative lung measures derived from computed tomography (CT) have been demonstrated to improve prognostication in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients but are not part of clinical routine because the required manual segmentation of lung lesions is prohibitively time consuming. We aim to automatically segment ground-glass opacities and high opacities (comprising consolidation and pleural effusion).Approach: We propose a new fully automated deep-learning framework for fast multi-class segmentation of lung lesions in COVID-19 pneumonia from both contrast and non-contrast CT images using convolutional long short-term memory (ConvLSTM) networks. Utilizing the expert annotations, model training was performed using five-fold cross-validation to segment COVID-19 lesions. The performance of the method was evaluated on CT datasets from 197 patients with a positive reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction test result for SARS-CoV-2, 68 unseen test cases, and 695 independent controls.Results: Strong agreement between expert manual and automatic segmentation was obtained for lung lesions with a Dice score of 0.89 +/- 0.07; excellent correlations of 0.93 and 0.98 for ground-glass opacity (GGO) and high opacity volumes, respectively, were obtained. In the external testing set of 68 patients, we observed a Dice score of 0.89 +/- 0.06 as well as excellent correlations of 0.99 and 0.98 for GGO and high opacity volumes, respectively. Computations for a CT scan comprising 120 slices were performed under 3 s on a computer equipped with an NVIDIA TITAN RTX GPU. Diagnostically, the automated quantification of the lung burden % discriminate COVID-19 patients from controls with an area under the receiver operating curve of 0.96 (0.95-0.98).Conclusions: Our method allows for the rapid fully automated quantitative measurement of the pneumonia burden from CT, which can be used to rapidly assess the severity of COVID-19 pneumonia on chest CT. (C) 2022 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Rapid quantification of COVID-19 pneumonia burden from computed tomography with convolutional long short-term memory networks / A. Killekar, K. Grodecki, A. Lin, S. Cadet, P. Mcelhinney, A. Razipour, C. Chan, B.D. Pressman, P. Julien, P. Chen, J. Simon, P. Maurovich-Horvat, N. Gaibazzi, U. Thakur, E. Mancini, C. Agalbato, J. Munechika, H. Matsumoto, R. Menè, G. Parati, F. Cernigliaro, N. Nerlekar, C. Torlasco, G. Pontone, D. Dey, P. Slomka. - 9:5(2022 Sep), pp. 054001.1-054001.19. [10.1117/1.JMI.9.5.054001]
Rapid quantification of COVID-19 pneumonia burden from computed tomography with convolutional long short-term memory networks
C. Agalbato;F. Cernigliaro;G. Pontone;
2022
Abstract
Purpose: Quantitative lung measures derived from computed tomography (CT) have been demonstrated to improve prognostication in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) patients but are not part of clinical routine because the required manual segmentation of lung lesions is prohibitively time consuming. We aim to automatically segment ground-glass opacities and high opacities (comprising consolidation and pleural effusion).Approach: We propose a new fully automated deep-learning framework for fast multi-class segmentation of lung lesions in COVID-19 pneumonia from both contrast and non-contrast CT images using convolutional long short-term memory (ConvLSTM) networks. Utilizing the expert annotations, model training was performed using five-fold cross-validation to segment COVID-19 lesions. The performance of the method was evaluated on CT datasets from 197 patients with a positive reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction test result for SARS-CoV-2, 68 unseen test cases, and 695 independent controls.Results: Strong agreement between expert manual and automatic segmentation was obtained for lung lesions with a Dice score of 0.89 +/- 0.07; excellent correlations of 0.93 and 0.98 for ground-glass opacity (GGO) and high opacity volumes, respectively, were obtained. In the external testing set of 68 patients, we observed a Dice score of 0.89 +/- 0.06 as well as excellent correlations of 0.99 and 0.98 for GGO and high opacity volumes, respectively. Computations for a CT scan comprising 120 slices were performed under 3 s on a computer equipped with an NVIDIA TITAN RTX GPU. Diagnostically, the automated quantification of the lung burden % discriminate COVID-19 patients from controls with an area under the receiver operating curve of 0.96 (0.95-0.98).Conclusions: Our method allows for the rapid fully automated quantitative measurement of the pneumonia burden from CT, which can be used to rapidly assess the severity of COVID-19 pneumonia on chest CT. (C) 2022 Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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