npj Digital Medicine (Aug 2023)

CathAI: fully automated coronary angiography interpretation and stenosis estimation

  • Robert Avram,
  • Jeffrey E. Olgin,
  • Zeeshan Ahmed,
  • Louis Verreault-Julien,
  • Alvin Wan,
  • Joshua Barrios,
  • Sean Abreau,
  • Derek Wan,
  • Joseph E. Gonzalez,
  • Jean-Claude Tardif,
  • Derek Y. So,
  • Krishan Soni,
  • Geoffrey H. Tison

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41746-023-00880-1
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

Read online

Abstract Coronary angiography is the primary procedure for diagnosis and management decisions in coronary artery disease (CAD), but ad-hoc visual assessment of angiograms has high variability. Here we report a fully automated approach to interpret angiographic coronary artery stenosis from standard coronary angiograms. Using 13,843 angiographic studies from 11,972 adult patients at University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), between April 1, 2008 and December 31, 2019, we train neural networks to accomplish four sequential necessary tasks for automatic coronary artery stenosis localization and estimation. Algorithms are internally validated against criterion-standard labels for each task in hold-out test datasets. Algorithms are then externally validated in real-world angiograms from the University of Ottawa Heart Institute (UOHI) and also retrained using quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) data from the Montreal Heart Institute (MHI) core lab. The CathAI system achieves state-of-the-art performance across all tasks on unselected, real-world angiograms. Positive predictive value, sensitivity and F1 score are all ≥90% to identify projection angle and ≥93% for left/right coronary artery angiogram detection. To predict obstructive CAD stenosis (≥70%), CathAI exhibits an AUC of 0.862 (95% CI: 0.843–0.880). In UOHI external validation, CathAI achieves AUC 0.869 (95% CI: 0.830–0.907) to predict obstructive CAD. In the MHI QCA dataset, CathAI achieves an AUC of 0.775 (95%. CI: 0.594–0.955) after retraining. In conclusion, multiple purpose-built neural networks can function in sequence to accomplish automated analysis of real-world angiograms, which could increase standardization and reproducibility in angiographic coronary stenosis assessment.