JMIR Formative Research (Oct 2023)

Predicting the Risk of Total Hip Replacement by Using A Deep Learning Algorithm on Plain Pelvic Radiographs: Diagnostic Study

  • Chih-Chi Chen,
  • Cheng-Ta Wu,
  • Carl P C Chen,
  • Chia-Ying Chung,
  • Shann-Ching Chen,
  • Mel S Lee,
  • Chi-Tung Cheng,
  • Chien-Hung Liao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.2196/42788
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
p. e42788

Abstract

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BackgroundTotal hip replacement (THR) is considered the gold standard of treatment for refractory degenerative hip disorders. Identifying patients who should receive THR in the short term is important. Some conservative treatments, such as intra-articular injection administered a few months before THR, may result in higher odds of arthroplasty infection. Delayed THR after functional deterioration may result in poorer outcomes and longer waiting times for those who have been flagged as needing THR. Deep learning (DL) in medical imaging applications has recently obtained significant breakthroughs. However, the use of DL in practical wayfinding, such as short-term THR prediction, is still lacking. ObjectiveIn this study, we will propose a DL-based assistant system for patients with pelvic radiographs to identify the need for THR within 3 months. MethodsWe developed a convolutional neural network–based DL algorithm to analyze pelvic radiographs, predict the hip region of interest (ROI), and determine whether or not THR is required. The data set was collected from August 2008 to December 2017. The images included 3013 surgical hip ROIs that had undergone THR and 1630 nonsurgical hip ROIs. The images were split, using split-sample validation, into training (n=3903, 80%), validation (n=476, 10%), and testing (n=475, 10%) sets to evaluate the algorithm performance. ResultsThe algorithm, called SurgHipNet, yielded an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.994 (95% CI 0.990-0.998). The accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and F1-score of the model were 0.977, 0.920, 0932, and 0.944, respectively. ConclusionsThe proposed approach has demonstrated that SurgHipNet shows the ability and potential to provide efficient support in clinical decision-making; it can assist physicians in promptly determining the optimal timing for THR.