Streamlining management in thoracic trauma: radiomics- and AI-based assessment of patient risks.

IF 1.6 4区 医学 Q2 SURGERY
Frontiers in Surgery Pub Date : 2024-10-24 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fsurg.2024.1462692
Ashraf F Hefny, Taleb M Almansoori, Darya Smetanina, Daria Morozova, Roman Voitetskii, Karuna M Das, Aidar Kashapov, Nirmin A Mansour, Mai A Fathi, Mohammed Khogali, Milos Ljubisavljevic, Yauhen Statsenko
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: In blunt chest trauma, patient management is challenging because clinical guidelines miss tools for risk assessment. No clinical scale reliably measures the severity of cases and the chance of complications.

Aim: The objective of the study was to optimize the management of patients with blunt chest trauma by creating models prognosticating the transfer to the intensive care unit and in-hospital length of stay (LOS).

Methods: The study cohort consisted of 212 cases. We retrieved information on the cases from the hospital's trauma registry. After segmenting the lungs with Lung CT Analyzer, we performed volumetric feature extraction with data-characterization algorithms in PyRadiomics.

Results: To predict whether the patient will require intensive care, we used the three groups of findings: ambulance, admission, and radiomics data. When trained on the ambulance data, the models exhibited a borderline performance. The metrics improved after we retrained the models on a combination of ambulance, laboratory, radiologic, and physical examination data (81.5% vs. 94.4% Sn). Radiomics data were the top-accurate predictors (96.3% Sn). Age, vital signs, anthropometrics, and first aid time were the best-performing features collected by the ambulance service. Laboratory findings, AIS scores for the lower extremity, abdomen, head, and thorax constituted the top-rank predictors received on admission to the hospital. The original first-order kurtosis had the highest predictive value among radiomics data. Top-informative radiomics features were derived from the right hemithorax because the right lung is larger. We constructed regression models that can adequately reflect the in-hospital LOS. When trained on different groups of data, the machine-learning regression models showed similar performance (MAE/ROV 8%). Anatomic scores for the body parts other than thorax and laboratory markers of hemorrhage had the highest predictive value. Hence, the number of injured body parts correlated with the case severity.

Conclusion: The study findings can be used to optimize the management of patients with a chest blunt injury as a specific case of monotrauma. The models we built may help physicians to stratify patients by risk of worsening and overcome the limitations of existing tools for risk assessment. High-quality AI models trained on radiomics data demonstrate superior performance.

简化胸部创伤的管理:基于放射影像学和人工智能的患者风险评估。
背景:在钝性胸部创伤中,由于临床指南缺少风险评估工具,因此患者管理具有挑战性。目的:本研究的目的是通过建立转入重症监护室和住院时间(LOS)的预后模型,优化胸部钝挫伤患者的管理:研究队列包括 212 个病例。方法:研究队列由 212 个病例组成,我们从医院的创伤登记处获取了这些病例的信息。用肺部 CT 分析仪分割肺部后,我们用 PyRadiomics 中的数据特征算法进行了容积特征提取:为了预测患者是否需要重症监护,我们使用了三组结果:救护车数据、入院数据和放射组学数据。在救护车数据上训练时,模型表现出了边缘性能。在我们结合救护车、实验室、放射和体检数据对模型进行重新训练后,指标有所改善(81.5% 对 94.4%)。放射组学数据是最准确的预测指标(96.3% Sn)。年龄、生命体征、人体测量和急救时间是救护车服务收集的表现最好的特征。实验室检查结果、下肢、腹部、头部和胸部的 AIS 评分是入院时收到的最佳预测指标。在放射组学数据中,原始一阶峰度的预测价值最高。由于右肺面积较大,因此信息量最大的放射组学特征来自右半胸。我们构建的回归模型可以充分反映院内生命周期。在对不同组数据进行训练时,机器学习回归模型表现出相似的性能(MAE/ROV ≈ 8%)。胸腔以外身体部位的解剖学评分和出血的实验室指标具有最高的预测价值。因此,受伤身体部位的数量与病例的严重程度相关:研究结果可用于优化对胸部钝伤患者的管理,因为胸部钝伤是一种特殊的单发创伤。我们建立的模型可以帮助医生根据病情恶化的风险对患者进行分层,克服现有风险评估工具的局限性。根据放射组学数据训练的高质量人工智能模型表现出卓越的性能。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Surgery
Frontiers in Surgery Medicine-Surgery
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
11.10%
发文量
1872
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: Evidence of surgical interventions go back to prehistoric times. Since then, the field of surgery has developed into a complex array of specialties and procedures, particularly with the advent of microsurgery, lasers and minimally invasive techniques. The advanced skills now required from surgeons has led to ever increasing specialization, though these still share important fundamental principles. Frontiers in Surgery is the umbrella journal representing the publication interests of all surgical specialties. It is divided into several “Specialty Sections” listed below. All these sections have their own Specialty Chief Editor, Editorial Board and homepage, but all articles carry the citation Frontiers in Surgery. Frontiers in Surgery calls upon medical professionals and scientists from all surgical specialties to publish their experimental and clinical studies in this journal. By assembling all surgical specialties, which nonetheless retain their independence, under the common umbrella of Frontiers in Surgery, a powerful publication venue is created. Since there is often overlap and common ground between the different surgical specialties, assembly of all surgical disciplines into a single journal will foster a collaborative dialogue amongst the surgical community. This means that publications, which are also of interest to other surgical specialties, will reach a wider audience and have greater impact. The aim of this multidisciplinary journal is to create a discussion and knowledge platform of advances and research findings in surgical practice today to continuously improve clinical management of patients and foster innovation in this field.
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