自由呼吸单次运动CMR与生成式人工智能用于评估心脏容量和功能指标:一项可重复性研究。

IF 4.2 1区 医学 Q1 CARDIAC & CARDIOVASCULAR SYSTEMS
Fahime Ghanbari, Alexander Schulz, Manuel A Morales, Jennifer Rodriguez, Jordan A Street, Kathryn Arcand, Scott Johnson, Patrick Pierce, Christopher W Hoeger, Connie W Tsao, Warren J Manning, Reza Nezafat
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:运动CMR (Ex-CMR)可以通过量化运动期间或运动后的双心室体积和功能来揭示静止时不明显的病理生理。然而,由于有限的空间和时间分辨率,实现可重复的Ex-CMR测量具有挑战性。本研究旨在开发和评估一种由生成式人工智能增强的自由呼吸、高时空分辨率单拍Ex-CMR电影。我们评估了图像分析的再现性、扫描-扫描的再现性以及分析中读者体验的影响。方法:在3T CMR系统上使用自由呼吸、高加速、多层、单拍电影序列(面内时空分辨率分别为1.9 × 1.9mm²和37 ms)进行成像。通过将压缩感知重构与分辨率增强生成对抗内联神经网络(重获)相结合,实现了高加速度。前cmr使用放置在磁孔外的仰卧测力仪进行。在休息时和运动后立即获得单拍电影图像。在一项前瞻性研究中,141名受试者对该方案进行了评估。实现了一个结构化的图像分析工作流。四名专家读者,有或没有在单拍前cmr事先培训,独立评估所有图像的诊断和图像质量。主观评价采用两个3点李克特量表。计算双心室参数。评估了观察者之间和观察者内部的再现性。15名健康受试者在一年后重新成像以进行扫描-扫描再现。使用类内相关系数(ICC)评估再现性,通过Bland-Altman分析、线性回归和Pearson相关评估一致性。结果:自由呼吸、单次跳动的Ex-CMR电影能够在30±6秒内对跳动的心脏进行成像,96%的受试者在技术上成功扫描。运动后单拍电影图像在98%、96%、82%和65%的病例中被四名读者(按前cmr经验年数递减排序)评估为诊断。74%至80%的受试者图像质量良好。所有受试者的双心室参数均被成功测量,显示出良好至优异的观察者间再现性。扫描/再扫描1年的再现性,由两名独立读者评估,显示出良好的访间icc(0.96-1.0)和强相关性(R²≥0.92,LV < 0.001);R²≥0.95,RV < 0.001)。结论:单次Ex-CMR能够评估双心室容量和功能指标,具有良好的重复性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Free-breathing single-beat exercise cardiovascular magnetic resonance with generative artificial intelligence for evaluation of volumetric and functional cardiac indices: A reproducibility study.

Background: Exercise cardiovascular magnetic resonance (Ex-CMR) can reveal pathophysiologies not evident at rest by quantifying biventricular volume and function during or immediately after exercise. However, achieving reproducible Ex-CMR measurements is challenging due to limited spatial and temporal resolution. This study aimed to develop and evaluate a free-breathing, high-spatiotemporal-resolution single-beat Ex-CMR cine enhanced by generative artificial intelligence. We assessed image analysis reproducibility, scan-rescan reproducibility, and impact of the reader's experience on the analysis.

Methods: Imaging was performed on a 3T CMR system using a free-breathing, highly accelerated, multi-slice, single-beat cine sequence (in-plane spatiotemporal resolution of 1.9 × 1.9 mm² and 37 ms, respectively). High acceleration was achieved by combining compressed sensing reconstruction with a resolution-enhancement generative adversarial inline neural network. Ex-CMR was performed using a supine ergometer positioned immediately outside the magnet bore. Single-beat cine images were acquired at rest and immediately post-exercise. In a prospective study, the protocol was evaluated in 141 subjects. A structured image analysis workflow was implemented. Four expert readers, with or without prior training in single-beat Ex-CMR, independently rated all images for diagnostic and image quality. The subjective assessment used two 3-point Likert scales. Biventricular parameters were calculated. Inter- and intra-observer reproducibility were assessed. Fifteen healthy subjects were re-imaged 1 year later for scan-rescan reproducibility. Reproducibility was assessed using intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), with agreement evaluated via Bland-Altman analysis, linear regression, and Pearson correlation.

Results: Free-breathing, single-beat Ex-CMR cine enabled imaging of the beating heart within 30 ± 6 s, with technically successful scans in 96% (136/141) of subjects. Post-exercise single-beat cine images were assessed as diagnostic in 98% (133/136), 96% (131/136), 82% (112/136), and 65% (89/136) of cases by four readers (ordered by descending years of Ex-CMR experience). Good image quality was reported in 74% (100/136) to 80% (109/136) of subjects. Biventricular parameters were successfully measured in all subjects, demonstrating good to excellent inter-observer reproducibility. Scan/rescan reproducibility over 1 year, assessed by two independent readers, showed excellent inter-visit ICCs (0.96-1.0) and strong correlations (R² ≥ 0.92, p < 0.001 for left ventricle; R² ≥ 0.95, p < 0.001 for right ventricle).

Conclusion: Single-beat Ex-CMR enabled evaluation of biventricular volumetric and functional indices with excellent reproducibility.

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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.90
自引率
12.50%
发文量
61
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance (JCMR) publishes high-quality articles on all aspects of basic, translational and clinical research on the design, development, manufacture, and evaluation of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) methods applied to the cardiovascular system. Topical areas include, but are not limited to: New applications of magnetic resonance to improve the diagnostic strategies, risk stratification, characterization and management of diseases affecting the cardiovascular system. New methods to enhance or accelerate image acquisition and data analysis. Results of multicenter, or larger single-center studies that provide insight into the utility of CMR. Basic biological perceptions derived by CMR methods.
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