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Harnessing the power of longitudinal medical imaging for eye disease prognosis using Transformer-based sequence modeling.
Holste, Gregory; Lin, Mingquan; Zhou, Ruiwen; Wang, Fei; Liu, Lei; Yan, Qi; Van Tassel, Sarah H; Kovacs, Kyle; Chew, Emily Y; Lu, Zhiyong; Wang, Zhangyang; Peng, Yifan.
Affiliation
  • Holste G; Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
  • Lin M; Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USA.
  • Zhou R; Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
  • Wang F; Department of Surgery, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA.
  • Liu L; Center for Biostatistics and Data Science, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
  • Yan Q; Department of Population Health Sciences, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
  • Van Tassel SH; Center for Biostatistics and Data Science, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO, USA.
  • Kovacs K; Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, Columbia University Irving Medical Center, New York, NY, USA.
  • Chew EY; Israel Englander Department of Ophthalmology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
  • Lu Z; Israel Englander Department of Ophthalmology, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
  • Wang Z; Division of Epidemiology and Clinical Applications, National Eye Institute, National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, MD, USA.
  • Peng Y; National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI), National Library of Medicine (NLM), National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, MD, USA.
NPJ Digit Med ; 7(1): 216, 2024 Aug 16.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39152209
ABSTRACT
Deep learning has enabled breakthroughs in automated diagnosis from medical imaging, with many successful applications in ophthalmology. However, standard medical image classification approaches only assess disease presence at the time of acquisition, neglecting the common clinical setting of longitudinal imaging. For slow, progressive eye diseases like age-related macular degeneration (AMD) and primary open-angle glaucoma (POAG), patients undergo repeated imaging over time to track disease progression and forecasting the future risk of developing a disease is critical to properly plan treatment. Our proposed Longitudinal Transformer for Survival Analysis (LTSA) enables dynamic disease prognosis from longitudinal medical imaging, modeling the time to disease from sequences of fundus photography images captured over long, irregular time periods. Using longitudinal imaging data from the Age-Related Eye Disease Study (AREDS) and Ocular Hypertension Treatment Study (OHTS), LTSA significantly outperformed a single-image baseline in 19/20 head-to-head comparisons on late AMD prognosis and 18/20 comparisons on POAG prognosis. A temporal attention analysis also suggested that, while the most recent image is typically the most influential, prior imaging still provides additional prognostic value.

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: NPJ Digit Med Year: 2024 Type: Article Affiliation country: United States

Full text: 1 Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: NPJ Digit Med Year: 2024 Type: Article Affiliation country: United States