Prediction of vascular aging based on smartphone acquired PPG signals.

Journal: Scientific reports
Published Date:

Abstract

Photoplethysmography (PPG) measured by smartphone has the potential for a large scale, non-invasive, and easy-to-use screening tool. Vascular aging is linked to increased arterial stiffness, which can be measured by PPG. We investigate the feasibility of using PPG to predict healthy vascular aging (HVA) based on two approaches: machine learning (ML) and deep learning (DL). We performed data preprocessing, including detrending, demodulating, and denoising on the raw PPG signals. For ML, ridge penalized regression has been applied to 38 features extracted from PPG, whereas for DL several convolutional neural networks (CNNs) have been applied to the whole PPG signals as input. The analysis has been conducted using the crowd-sourced Heart for Heart data. The prediction performance of ML using two features (AUC of 94.7%) - the a wave of the second derivative PPG and tpr, including four covariates, sex, height, weight, and smoking - was similar to that of the best performing CNN, 12-layer ResNet (AUC of 95.3%). Without having the heavy computational cost of DL, ML might be advantageous in finding potential biomarkers for HVA prediction. The whole workflow of the procedure is clearly described, and open software has been made available to facilitate replication of the results.

Authors

  • Lorenzo Dall'Olio
    Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Bologna, 40126, Bologna, BO, Italy.
  • Nico Curti
    Department of Specialised, Diagnostic and Experimental Medicine, University of Bologna, 40126, Bologna, BO, Italy.
  • Daniel Remondini
    Department of Physics and Astronomy (DIFA), University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy.
  • Yosef Safi Harb
    Happitech, 1015 BT, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
  • Folkert W Asselbergs
  • Gastone Castellani
    Department of Specialised, Diagnostic and Experimental Medicine, University of Bologna, 40126, Bologna, BO, Italy.
  • Hae-Won Uh
    Department of Biostatistics and Research Support, University Medical Center Utrecht, 3584 CX, Utrecht, The Netherlands. h.w.uh@umcutrecht.nl.