Automatic geographic atrophy segmentation using optical attenuation in OCT scans with deep learning

Author:

Chu Zhongdi1ORCID,Wang Liang2,Zhou Xiao1,Shi Yingying2,Cheng Yuxuan1,Laiginhas Rita2,Zhou Hao1ORCID,Shen Mengxi2ORCID,Zhang Qinqin1,de Sisternes Luis3,Lee Aaron Y.1,Gregori Giovanni2,Rosenfeld Philip J.2,Wang Ruikang K.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. University of Washington

2. University of Miami Miller School of Medicine

3. Carl Zeiss Meditec, Inc

Abstract

A deep learning algorithm was developed to automatically identify, segment, and quantify geographic atrophy (GA) based on optical attenuation coefficients (OACs) calculated from optical coherence tomography (OCT) datasets. Normal eyes and eyes with GA secondary to age-related macular degeneration were imaged with swept-source OCT using 6 × 6 mm scanning patterns. OACs calculated from OCT scans were used to generate customized composite en face OAC images. GA lesions were identified and measured using customized en face sub-retinal pigment epithelium (subRPE) OCT images. Two deep learning models with the same U-Net architecture were trained using OAC images and subRPE OCT images. Model performance was evaluated using DICE similarity coefficients (DSCs). The GA areas were calculated and compared with manual segmentations using Pearson’s correlation and Bland-Altman plots. In total, 80 GA eyes and 60 normal eyes were included in this study, out of which, 16 GA eyes and 12 normal eyes were used to test the models. Both models identified GA with 100% sensitivity and specificity on the subject level. With the GA eyes, the model trained with OAC images achieved significantly higher DSCs, stronger correlation to manual results and smaller mean bias than the model trained with subRPE OCT images (0.940 ± 0.032 vs 0.889 ± 0.056, p = 0.03, paired t-test, r = 0.995 vs r = 0.959, mean bias = 0.011 mm vs mean bias = 0.117 mm). In summary, the proposed deep learning model using composite OAC images effectively and accurately identified, segmented, and quantified GA using OCT scans.

Funder

Research to Prevent Blindness

Carl Zeiss Meditec Inc

National Eye Institute

Publisher

Optica Publishing Group

Subject

Atomic and Molecular Physics, and Optics,Biotechnology

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