International Journal of Cardiology: Heart & Vasculature (Apr 2024)

Identifying patients with acute aortic dissection using an electrocardiogram with convolutional neural network

  • Takuto Arita,
  • Shinya Suzuki,
  • Jun Motogi,
  • Takuya Umemoto,
  • Naomi Hirota,
  • Hiroshi Nakai,
  • Wataru Matsuzawa,
  • Tsuneo Takayanagi,
  • Akira Hyodo,
  • Keiichi Satoh,
  • Naoharu Yagi,
  • Takayuki Otsuka,
  • Mikio Kishi,
  • Hiroto Kano,
  • Shunsuke Matsuno,
  • Yuko Kato,
  • Tokuhisa Uejima,
  • Yuji Oikawa,
  • Takayuki Hori,
  • Minoru Matsuhama,
  • Mitsuru Iida,
  • Junji Yajima,
  • Takeshi Yamashita

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 51
p. 101389

Abstract

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Background: The potential of utilizing artificial intelligence with electrocardiography (ECG) for initial screening of aortic dissection (AD) is promising. However, achieving a high positive predictive rate (PPR) remains challenging. Methods and results: This retrospective analysis of a single-center, prospective cohort study (Shinken Database 2010–2017, N = 19,170) used digital 12-lead ECGs from initial patient visits. We assessed a convolutional neural network (CNN) model's performance for AD detection with eight-lead (I, II, and V1-6), single-lead, and double-lead (I, II) ECGs via five-fold cross-validation. The mean age was 63.5 ± 12.5 years for the AD group (n = 147) and 58.1 ± 15.7 years for the non-AD group (n = 19,023). The CNN model achieved an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.936 (standard deviation [SD]: 0.023) for AD detection with eight-lead ECGs. In the entire cohort, the PPR was 7 %, with 126 out of 147 AD cases correctly diagnosed (sensitivity 86 %). When applied to patients with D-dimer levels ≥1 μg/dL and a history of hypertension, the PPR increased to 35 %, with 113 AD cases correctly identified (sensitivity 86 %). The single V1 lead displayed the highest diagnostic performance (AUC: 0.933, SD: 0.03), with PPR improvement from 8 % to 38 % within the same population. Conclusions: Our CNN model using ECG data for AD detection achieved an over 30% PPR when applied to patients with elevated D-dimer levels and hypertension history while maintaining sensitivity. A similar level of performance was observed with a single-lead V1 ECG in the CNN model.

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