Learning coronary artery calcium scoring in coronary CTA from non-contrast CT using unsupervised domain adaptation

Deep learning methods have demonstrated the ability to perform accurate coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring. However, these methods require large and representative training data hampering applicability to diverse CT scans showing the heart and the coronary arteries. Training methods that accurate...

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Published inFrontiers in cardiovascular medicine Vol. 9; p. 981901
Main Authors Zhai, Zhiwei, van Velzen, Sanne G. M., Lessmann, Nikolas, Planken, Nils, Leiner, Tim, Išgum, Ivana
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Frontiers Media S.A 12.09.2022
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ISSN2297-055X
2297-055X
DOI10.3389/fcvm.2022.981901

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Summary:Deep learning methods have demonstrated the ability to perform accurate coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring. However, these methods require large and representative training data hampering applicability to diverse CT scans showing the heart and the coronary arteries. Training methods that accurately score CAC in cross-domain settings remains challenging. To address this, we present an unsupervised domain adaptation method that learns to perform CAC scoring in coronary CT angiography (CCTA) from non-contrast CT (NCCT). To address the domain shift between NCCT (source) domain and CCTA (target) domain, feature distributions are aligned between two domains using adversarial learning. A CAC scoring convolutional neural network is divided into a feature generator that maps input images to features in the latent space and a classifier that estimates predictions from the extracted features. For adversarial learning, a discriminator is used to distinguish the features between source and target domains. Hence, the feature generator aims to extract features with aligned distributions to fool the discriminator. The network is trained with adversarial loss as the objective function and a classification loss on the source domain as a constraint for adversarial learning. In the experiments, three data sets were used. The network is trained with 1,687 labeled chest NCCT scans from the National Lung Screening Trial. Furthermore, 200 labeled cardiac NCCT scans and 200 unlabeled CCTA scans were used to train the generator and the discriminator for unsupervised domain adaptation. Finally, a data set containing 313 manually labeled CCTA scans was used for testing. Directly applying the CAC scoring network trained on NCCT to CCTA led to a sensitivity of 0.41 and an average false positive volume 140 mm 3 /scan. The proposed method improved the sensitivity to 0.80 and reduced average false positive volume of 20 mm 3 /scan. The results indicate that the unsupervised domain adaptation approach enables automatic CAC scoring in contrast enhanced CT while learning from a large and diverse set of CT scans without contrast. This may allow for better utilization of existing annotated data sets and extend the applicability of automatic CAC scoring to contrast-enhanced CT scans without the need for additional manual annotations. The code is publicly available at https://github.com/qurAI-amsterdam/CACscoringUsingDomainAdaptation .
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Reviewed by: Alexander Van Rosendael, Leiden University Medical Center (LUMC), Netherlands; Uxio Hermida, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine, King's College London, United Kingdom; Hieu Nguyen, Johns Hopkins University, United States
This article was submitted to Cardiovascular Imaging, a section of the journal Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine
Edited by: Federico Caobelli, University Hospital of Basel, Switzerland
ISSN:2297-055X
2297-055X
DOI:10.3389/fcvm.2022.981901