BMC Medical Imaging (Nov 2023)

Deep learning model for measuring the sagittal Cobb angle on cervical spine computed tomography

  • Chunjie Wang,
  • Ming Ni,
  • Shuai Tian,
  • Hanqiang Ouyang,
  • Xiaoming Liu,
  • Lianxi Fan,
  • Pei Dong,
  • Liang Jiang,
  • Ning Lang,
  • Huishu Yuan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12880-023-01156-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Purposes To develop a deep learning (DL) model to measure the sagittal Cobb angle of the cervical spine on computed tomography (CT). Materials and methods Two VB-Net-based DL models for cervical vertebra segmentation and key-point detection were developed. Four-points and line-fitting methods were used to calculate the sagittal Cobb angle automatically. The average value of the sagittal Cobb angle was manually measured by two doctors as the reference standard. The percentage of correct key points (PCK), matched samples t test, intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), Pearson correlation coefficient, mean absolute error (MAE), and Bland‒Altman plots were used to evaluate the performance of the DL model and the robustness and generalization of the model on the external test set. Results A total of 991 patients were included in the internal data set, and 112 patients were included in the external data set. The PCK of the DL model ranged from 78 to 100% in the test set. The four-points method, line-fitting method, and reference standard measured sagittal Cobb angles were − 1.10 ± 18.29°, 0.30 ± 13.36°, and 0.50 ± 12.83° in the internal test set and 4.55 ± 20.01°, 3.66 ± 18.55°, and 1.83 ± 12.02° in the external test set, respectively. The sagittal Cobb angle calculated by the four-points method and the line-fitting method maintained high consistency with the reference standard (internal test set: ICC = 0.75 and 0.97; r = 0.64 and 0.94; MAE = 5.42° and 3.23°, respectively; external test set: ICC = 0.74 and 0.80, r = 0.66 and 0.974, MAE = 5.25° and 4.68°, respectively). Conclusions The DL model can accurately measure the sagittal Cobb angle of the cervical spine on CT. The line-fitting method shows a higher consistency with the doctors and a minor average absolute error.

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