AI Article Synopsis

  • Scoliosis affects over 8% of adults in the U.S. and is typically diagnosed using the Cobb angle measured through radiographs, which is time-consuming and hinders surgical planning.
  • A new automated algorithm, developed through a pipeline called SpineTK, was trained on over 1300 images to measure Cobb angles quickly and accurately, achieving less than 2° error compared to experienced radiologists.
  • The algorithm performed consistently well across various patient demographics and types of images, suggesting it's a reliable tool for monitoring scoliosis progression efficiently and accurately.

Article Abstract

Scoliosis is a disease estimated to affect more than 8% of adults in the United States. It is diagnosed with use of radiography by means of manual measurement of the angle between maximally tilted vertebrae on a radiograph (ie, the Cobb angle). However, these measurements are time-consuming, limiting their use in scoliosis surgical planning and postoperative monitoring. In this retrospective study, a pipeline (using the SpineTK architecture) was developed that was trained, validated, and tested on 1310 anterior-posterior images obtained with a low-dose stereoradiographic scanning system and radiographs obtained in patients with suspected scoliosis to automatically measure Cobb angles. The images were obtained at six centers (2005-2020). The algorithm measured Cobb angles on hold-out internal ( = 460) and external ( = 161) test sets with less than 2° error (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.96) compared with ground truth measurements by two experienced radiologists. Measurements, produced in less than 0.5 second, did not differ significantly ( = .05 cutoff) from ground truth measurements, regardless of the presence or absence of surgical hardware ( = .80), age ( = .58), sex ( = .83), body mass index ( = .63), scoliosis severity ( = .44), or image type (low-dose stereoradiographic image vs radiograph; = .51) in the patient. These findings suggest that the algorithm is highly robust across different clinical characteristics. Given its automated, rapid, and accurate measurements, this network may be used for monitoring scoliosis progression in patients. Cobb Angle, Convolutional Neural Network, Deep Learning Algorithms, Pediatrics, Machine Learning Algorithms, Scoliosis, Spine . © RSNA, 2023.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10388214PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1148/ryai.220158DOI Listing

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