ISLE: An Intelligent Streaming Framework for High-Throughput AI Inference in Medical Imaging.

Journal: Journal of imaging informatics in medicine
Published Date:

Abstract

As the adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) systems in radiology grows, the increase in demand for greater bandwidth and computational resources can lead to greater infrastructural costs for healthcare providers and AI vendors. To that end, we developed ISLE, an intelligent streaming framework to address inefficiencies in current imaging infrastructures. Our framework draws inspiration from video-on-demand platforms to intelligently stream medical images to AI vendors at an optimal resolution for inference from a single high-resolution copy using progressive encoding. We hypothesize that ISLE can dramatically reduce the bandwidth and computational requirements for AI inference, while increasing throughput (i.e., the number of scans processed by the AI system per second). We evaluate our framework by streaming chest X-rays for classification and abdomen CT scans for liver and spleen segmentation and comparing them with the original versions of each dataset. For classification, our results show that ISLE reduced data transmission and decoding time by at least 92% and 88%, respectively, while increasing throughput by more than 3.72 × . For both segmentation tasks, ISLE reduced data transmission and decoding time by at least 82% and 88%, respectively, while increasing throughput by more than 2.9 × . In all three tasks, the ISLE streamed data had no impact on the AI system's diagnostic performance (all P > 0.05). Therefore, our results indicate that our framework can address inefficiencies in current imaging infrastructures by improving data and computational efficiency of AI deployments in the clinical environment without impacting clinical decision-making using AI systems.

Authors

  • Pranav Kulkarni
    Bioinformatics Facility, CECAD Research Center, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany.
  • Adway Kanhere
    Department of Otorhinolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA; University of Maryland Institute for Health Computing, Bethesda, MD, USA.
  • Eliot L Siegel
    University of Maryland School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA. esiegel@umaryland.edu.
  • Paul H Yi
    The Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland. Electronic address: Pyi10@jhmi.edu.
  • Vishwa S Parekh
    The Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Sciences, The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.