Artificial intelligence evaluation of focused assessment with sonography in trauma.

J Trauma Acute Care Surg

From the Department of Surgery (B.E.L., J.T.C., W.S.W., E.M.), Institute for Biomedical Informatics (A.V.), Department of Pathology (C.B.), and Department of Radiology (T.B.), University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky; Division of Trauma, Emergency Surgery, and Surgical Critical Care, Department of Surgery (M.S., K.I.), University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California; and Division of Trauma Critical Care and Acute Care Surgery, Department of Surgery (Z.D.W.), University of Kentucky, Lexington, Kentucky.

Published: November 2023

Background: The focused assessment with sonography in trauma (FAST) is a widely used imaging modality to identify the location of life-threatening hemorrhage in a hemodynamically unstable trauma patient. This study evaluates the role of artificial intelligence in interpretation of the FAST examination abdominal views, as it pertains to adequacy of the view and accuracy of fluid survey positivity.

Methods: Focused assessment with sonography for trauma examination images from 2015 to 2022, from trauma activations, were acquired from a quaternary care level 1 trauma center with more than 3,500 adult trauma evaluations, annually. Images pertaining to the right upper quadrant and left upper quadrant views were obtained and read by a surgeon or radiologist. Positivity was defined as fluid present in the hepatorenal or splenorenal fossa, while adequacy was defined by the presence of both the liver and kidney or the spleen and kidney for the right upper quadrant or left upper quadrant views, respectively. Four convolutional neural network architecture models (DenseNet121, InceptionV3, ResNet50, Vgg11bn) were evaluated.

Results: A total of 6,608 images, representing 109 cases were included for analysis within the "adequate" and "positive" data sets. The models relayed 88.7% accuracy, 83.3% sensitivity, and 93.6% specificity for the adequate test cohort, while the positive cohort conferred 98.0% accuracy, 89.6% sensitivity, and 100.0% specificity against similar models. Augmentation improved the accuracy and sensitivity of the positive models to 95.1% accurate and 94.0% sensitive. DenseNet121 demonstrated the best accuracy across tasks.

Conclusion: Artificial intelligence can detect positivity and adequacy of FAST examinations with 94% and 97% accuracy, aiding in the standardization of care delivery with minimal expert clinician input. Artificial intelligence is a feasible modality to improve patient care imaging interpretation accuracy and should be pursued as a point-of-care clinical decision-making tool.

Level Of Evidence: Diagnostic Test/Criteria; Level III.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/TA.0000000000004021DOI Listing

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