1. | Byra M., Han A.♦, Boehringer A.S.♦, Zhang Y.N.♦, O'Brien Jr W.D.♦, Erdman Jr J.W.♦, Loomba R.♦, Sirlin C.B.♦, Andre M.♦, Liver fat assessment in multiview sonography using transfer learning with convolutional neural networks, Journal of Ultrasound in Medicine, ISSN: 0278-4297, DOI: 10.1002/jum.15693, pp.1-10, 2021Abstract:Objectives - To develop and evaluate deep learning models devised for liver fat assessment based on ultrasound (US) images acquired from four different liver views: transverse plane (hepatic veins at the confluence with the inferior vena cava, right portal vein, right posterior portal vein) and sagittal plane (liver/kidney). Methods - US images (four separate views) were acquired from 135 participants with known or suspected nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. Proton density fat fraction (PDFF) values derived from chemical shift-encoded magnetic resonance imaging served as ground truth. Transfer learning with a deep convolutional neural network (CNN) was applied to develop models for diagnosis of fatty liver (PDFF ≥ 5%), diagnosis of advanced steatosis (PDFF ≥ 10%), and PDFF quantification for each liver view separately. In addition, an ensemble model based on all four liver view models was investigated. Diagnostic performance was assessed using the area under the receiver operating characteristics curve (AUC), and quantification was assessed using the Spearman correlation coefficient (SCC). Results - The most accurate single view was the right posterior portal vein, with an SCC of 0.78 for quantifying PDFF and AUC values of 0.90 (PDFF ≥ 5%) and 0.79 (PDFF ≥ 10%). The ensemble of models achieved an SCC of 0.81 and AUCs of 0.91 (PDFF ≥ 5%) and 0.86 (PDFF ≥ 10%). Conclusion - Deep learning-based analysis of US images from different liver views can help assess liver fat. Keywords:attention mechanism, convolutional neural networks, deep learning, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, proton density fat fraction, ultrasound images Affiliations:Byra M. | - | IPPT PAN | Han A. | - | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (US) | Boehringer A.S. | - | University of California (US) | Zhang Y.N. | - | University of California (US) | O'Brien Jr W.D. | - | other affiliation | Erdman Jr J.W. | - | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (US) | Loomba R. | - | University of California (US) | Sirlin C.B. | - | University of California (US) | Andre M. | - | University of California (US) |
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2. | Han A.♦, Byra M., Heba E.♦, Andre M.P.♦, Erdman J.W.Jr.♦, Loomba R.♦, Sirlin C.B.♦, O'Brien W.D.Jr., Noninvasive diagnosis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and quantification of liver fat with radiofrequency ultrasound data using one-dimensional convolutional neural networks, Radiology, ISSN: 0033-8419, DOI: 10.1148/radiol.2020191160, Vol.295, No.2, pp.342-350, 2020Abstract:Background: Radiofrequency ultrasound data from the liver contain rich information about liver microstructure and composition. Deep learning might exploit such information to assess nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Purpose: To develop and evaluate deep learning algorithms that use radiofrequency data for NAFLD assessment, with MRI-derived proton density fat fraction (PDFF) as the reference. Materials and Methods: A HIPAA-compliant secondary analysis of a single-center prospective study was performed for adult participants with NAFLD and control participants without liver disease. Participants in the parent study were recruited between February 2012 and March 2014 and underwent same-day US and MRI of the liver. Participants were randomly divided into an equal number of training and test groups. The training group was used to develop two algorithms via cross-validation: a classifier to diagnose NAFLD (MRI PDFF ≥ 5%) and a fat fraction estimator to predict MRI PDFF. Both algorithms used one-dimensional convolutional neural networks. The test group was used to evaluate the classifier for sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy and to evaluate the estimator for correlation, bias, limits of agreements, and linearity between predicted fat fraction and MRI PDFF. Results: A total of 204 participants were analyzed, 140 had NAFLD (mean age, 52 years ± 14 [standard deviation]; 82 women) and 64 were control participants (mean age, 46 years ± 21; 42 women). In the test group, the classifier provided 96% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 90%, 99%) (98 of 102) accuracy for NAFLD diagnosis (sensitivity, 97% [95% CI: 90%, 100%], 68 of 70; specificity, 94% [95% CI: 79%, 99%], 30 of 32; positive predictive value, 97% [95% CI: 90%, 99%], 68 of 70; negative predictive value, 94% [95% CI: 79%, 98%], 30 of 32). The estimator-predicted fat fraction correlated with MRI PDFF (Pearson r = 0.85). The mean bias was 0.8% (P = .08), and 95% limits of agreement were -7.6% to 9.1%. The predicted fat fraction was linear with an MRI PDFF of 18% or less (r = 0.89, slope = 1.1, intercept = 1.3) and nonlinear with an MRI PDFF greater than 18%. Conclusion: Deep learning algorithms using radiofrequency ultrasound data are accurate for diagnosis of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease and hepatic fat fraction quantification when other causes of steatosis are excluded. Affiliations:Han A. | - | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (US) | Byra M. | - | IPPT PAN | Heba E. | - | other affiliation | Andre M.P. | - | University of California (US) | Erdman J.W.Jr. | - | University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (US) | Loomba R. | - | University of California (US) | Sirlin C.B. | - | University of California (US) |
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