Bibliographic Details
Title: |
Describing the Structural Phenotype of the Glaucomatous Optic Nerve Head Using Artificial Intelligence |
Authors: |
Panda, Satish K., Cheong, Haris, Tun, Tin A., Devella, Sripad K., Krishnadas, Ramaswami, Buist, Martin L., Perera, Shamira, Cheng, Ching-Yu, Aung, Tin, Thiéry, Alexandre H., Girard, Michaël J. A. |
Publication Year: |
2020 |
Collection: |
Computer Science |
Subject Terms: |
Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing, Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition, Computer Science - Machine Learning |
More Details: |
The optic nerve head (ONH) typically experiences complex neural- and connective-tissue structural changes with the development and progression of glaucoma, and monitoring these changes could be critical for improved diagnosis and prognosis in the glaucoma clinic. The gold-standard technique to assess structural changes of the ONH clinically is optical coherence tomography (OCT). However, OCT is limited to the measurement of a few hand-engineered parameters, such as the thickness of the retinal nerve fiber layer (RNFL), and has not yet been qualified as a stand-alone device for glaucoma diagnosis and prognosis applications. We argue this is because the vast amount of information available in a 3D OCT scan of the ONH has not been fully exploited. In this study we propose a deep learning approach that can: \textbf{(1)} fully exploit information from an OCT scan of the ONH; \textbf{(2)} describe the structural phenotype of the glaucomatous ONH; and that can \textbf{(3)} be used as a robust glaucoma diagnosis tool. Specifically, the structural features identified by our algorithm were found to be related to clinical observations of glaucoma. The diagnostic accuracy from these structural features was $92.0 \pm 2.3 \%$ with a sensitivity of $90.0 \pm 2.4 \% $ (at $95 \%$ specificity). By changing their magnitudes in steps, we were able to reveal how the morphology of the ONH changes as one transitions from a `non-glaucoma' to a `glaucoma' condition. We believe our work may have strong clinical implication for our understanding of glaucoma pathogenesis, and could be improved in the future to also predict future loss of vision. |
Document Type: |
Working Paper |
Access URL: |
http://arxiv.org/abs/2012.09755 |
Accession Number: |
edsarx.2012.09755 |
Database: |
arXiv |