AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores the standardization of retinal vascular tortuosity as a clinical biomarker for diagnosing diseases, identifying challenges in evaluation due to lack of guidelines.
  • A multi-expert validation process was used to assess computational measurements of tortuosity, involving multiple rounds of ratings from ophthalmological specialists on a defined scale.
  • Results showed considerable variability in expert ratings, highlighting the need for improved standardization, while the best computational metric achieved a strong prognostic performance close to expert assessments.

Article Abstract

Background: The retinal vascular tortuosity can be a potential indicator of relevant vascular and non-vascular diseases. However, the lack of a precise and standard guide for the tortuosity evaluation hinders its use for diagnostic and treatment purposes. This work aims to advance in the standardization of the retinal vascular tortuosity as a clinical biomarker with diagnostic potential, allowing, thereby, the validation of objective computational measurements on the basis of the entire spectrum of the expert knowledge.

Methods: This paper describes a multi-expert validation process of the computational vascular tortuosity measurements of reference. A group of five experts, covering the different clinical profiles of an ophthalmological service, and a four-grade scale from non-tortuous to severe tortuosity as well as non-tortuous / tortuous and asymptomatic / symptomatic binary classifications are considered for the analysis of the the multi-expert validation procedure. The specialists rating process comprises two rounds involving all the experts and a joint round to establish consensual rates. The expert agreement is analyzed throughout the rating procedure and, then, the consensual rates are set as the reference to validate the prognostic performance of four computational tortuosity metrics of reference.

Results: The Kappa indexes for the intra-rater agreement analysis were obtained between 0.35 and 0.83 whereas for the inter-rater agreement in the asymptomatic / symptomatic classification were between 0.22 and 0.76. The Area Under the Curve (AUC) for each expert against the consensual rates were placed between 0.61 and 0.83 whereas the prognostic performance of the best objective tortuosity metric was 0.80.

Conclusions: There is a high inter and intra-rater variability, especially for the case of the four grade scale. The prognostic performance of the tortuosity measurements is close to the experts' performance, especially for Grisan measurement. However, there is a gap between the automatic effectiveness and the expert perception given the lack of clinical criteria in the computational measurements.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6245828PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12874-018-0598-3DOI Listing

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