Artificial intelligence automation of echocardiographic measurements

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Background

Accurate measurement of echocardiographic parameters is crucial for the diagnosis of cardiovascular disease and tracking of change over time, however manual assessment is time-consuming and can be imprecise. Artificial intelligence (AI) has the potential to reduce clinician burden by automating the time-intensive task of comprehensive measurement of echocardiographic parameters.

Methods

We developed and validated open-sourced deep learning semantic segmentation models for the automated measurement of 18 anatomic and Doppler measurements in echocardiography. The outputs of segmentation models were compared to sonographer measurements from two institutions to access accuracy and precision.

Results

We utilized 877,983 echocardiographic measurements from 155,215 studies from Cedars-Sinai Medical Center (CSMC) to develop EchoNet-Measurements, an open-source deep learning model for echocardiographic annotation. The models demonstrated a good correlation when compared with sonographer measurements from held-out data from CSMC and an independent external validation dataset from Stanford Healthcare (SHC). Measurements across all nine B-mode and nine Doppler measurements had high accuracy (an overall R 2 of 0.967 (0.965 – 0.970) in the held-out CSMC dataset and 0.987 (0.984 – 0.989) in the SHC dataset). When evaluated end-to-end on a temporally distinct 2,103 studies at CSMC, EchoNet-Measurements performed well an overall R2 of 0.981 (0.976 – 0.984). Performance was consistent across patient characteristics including sex and atrial fibrillation status.

Conclusion

EchoNet-Measurement achieves high accuracy in automated echocardiographic measurement that is comparable to expert sonographers. This open-source model provides the foundation for future developments in AI applied to echocardiography.

Clinical Perspective

What Is New?

  • We developed EchoNet-Measurements, the first publicly available deep learning framework for comprehensive automated echocardiographic measurements.

  • We assessed the performance of EchoNet-Measurements, showing good precision and accuracy compared to human sonographers and cardiologists across multiple healthcare systems.

What Are the Clinical Implications?

  • Deep-learning automated echocardiographic measurements can be conducted in a fraction of a second, reducing the time burden on sonographers and standardizing measurements, and potentially enhance reproducibility and diagnostic reliability.

  • This open-source model provides broad opportunities for widespread adoption in both clinical use and research, including in resource-limited settings.

Article activity feed