Machine Learning–Enabled Multimodal Fusion of Intra-Atrial and Body Surface Signals in Prediction of Atrial Fibrillation Ablation Outcomes

Author:

Tang Siyi1ORCID,Razeghi Orod2ORCID,Kapoor Ridhima3ORCID,Alhusseini Mahmood I.3,Fazal Muhammad3,Rogers Albert J.3ORCID,Rodrigo Bort Miguel34,Clopton Paul3ORCID,Wang Paul J.3ORCID,Rubin Daniel L.5ORCID,Narayan Sanjiv M.3ORCID,Baykaner Tina3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Electrical Engineering (S.T.), Stanford University, CA.

2. University College London, Centre for Advanced Research Computing, United Kingdom (O.R.).

3. Department of Medicine, Division of Cardiovascular Medicine (R.K., M.I.A., M.F., A.J.R., M.R.B., P.C., P.J.W., S.M.N., T.B), Stanford University, CA.

4. CoMMLab, Universitat de Valencia, VA, Spain (M.R.B.).

5. Department of Radiology and Biomedical Data Science (D.L.R.), Stanford University, CA.

Abstract

Background: Machine learning is a promising approach to personalize atrial fibrillation management strategies for patients after catheter ablation. Prior atrial fibrillation ablation outcome prediction studies applied classical machine learning methods to hand-crafted clinical scores, and none have leveraged intracardiac electrograms or 12-lead surface electrocardiograms for outcome prediction. We hypothesized that (1) machine learning models trained on electrograms or electrocardiogram (ECG) signals can perform better at predicting patient outcomes after atrial fibrillation ablation than existing clinical scores and (2) multimodal fusion of electrogram, ECG, and clinical features can further improve the prediction of patient outcomes. Methods: Consecutive patients who underwent catheter ablation between 2015 and 2017 with panoramic left atrial electrogram before ablation and clinical follow-up for at least 1 year following ablation were included. Convolutional neural network and a novel multimodal fusion framework were developed for predicting 1-year atrial fibrillation recurrence after catheter ablation from electrogram, ECG signals, and clinical features. The models were trained and validated using 10-fold cross-validation on patient-level splits. Results: One hundred fifty-six patients (64.5±10.5 years, 74% male, 42% paroxysmal) were analyzed. Using electrogram signals alone, the convolutional neural network achieved an area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUROC) of 0.731, outperforming the existing APPLE scores (AUROC=0.644) and CHA2DS2-VASc scores (AUROC=0.650). Similarly using 12-lead ECG alone, the convolutional neural network achieved an AUROC of 0.767. Combining electrogram, ECG, and clinical features, the fusion model achieved an AUROC of 0.859, outperforming single and dual modality models. Conclusions: Deep neural networks trained on electrogram or ECG signals improved the prediction of catheter ablation outcome compared with existing clinical scores, and fusion of electrogram, ECG, and clinical features further improved the prediction. This suggests the promise of using machine learning to help treatment planning for patients after catheter ablation.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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