A multimodal deep learning model for cardiac resynchronisation therapy response prediction.

Journal: Medical image analysis
PMID:

Abstract

We present a novel multimodal deep learning framework for cardiac resynchronisation therapy (CRT) response prediction from 2D echocardiography and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) data. The proposed method first uses the 'nnU-Net' segmentation model to extract segmentations of the heart over the full cardiac cycle from the two modalities. Next, a multimodal deep learning classifier is used for CRT response prediction, which combines the latent spaces of the segmentation models of the two modalities. At test time, this framework can be used with 2D echocardiography data only, whilst taking advantage of the implicit relationship between CMR and echocardiography features learnt from the model. We evaluate our pipeline on a cohort of 50 CRT patients for whom paired echocardiography/CMR data were available, and results show that the proposed multimodal classifier results in a statistically significant improvement in accuracy compared to the baseline approach that uses only 2D echocardiography data. The combination of multimodal data enables CRT response to be predicted with 77.38% accuracy (83.33% sensitivity and 71.43% specificity), which is comparable with the current state-of-the-art in machine learning-based CRT response prediction. Our work represents the first multimodal deep learning approach for CRT response prediction.

Authors

  • Esther Puyol-Anton
  • Baldeep S Sidhu
    School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, King's College London, UK; Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital, London, UK.
  • Justin Gould
    School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, King's College London, UK; Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital, London, UK.
  • Bradley Porter
    School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, King's College London, UK; Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital, London, UK.
  • Mark K Elliott
    School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, King's College London, UK; Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital, London, UK.
  • Vishal Mehta
    School of Biomedical Engineering & Imaging Sciences, King's College London, UK; Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital, London, UK.
  • Christopher A Rinaldi
    Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical Engineering, King's College London, London, United Kingdom.
  • Andrew P King
    Division of Imaging Sciences and Biomedical Engineering, King's College London, London, United Kingdom. Electronic address: andrew.king@kcl.ac.uk.