Nature Communications (Nov 2023)

Fetal biometry and amniotic fluid volume assessment end-to-end automation using Deep Learning

  • Saad Slimani,
  • Salaheddine Hounka,
  • Abdelhak Mahmoudi,
  • Taha Rehah,
  • Dalal Laoudiyi,
  • Hanane Saadi,
  • Amal Bouziyane,
  • Amine Lamrissi,
  • Mohamed Jalal,
  • Said Bouhya,
  • Mustapha Akiki,
  • Youssef Bouyakhf,
  • Bouabid Badaoui,
  • Amina Radgui,
  • Musa Mhlanga,
  • El Houssine Bouyakhf

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42438-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Fetal biometry and amniotic fluid volume assessments are two essential yet repetitive tasks in fetal ultrasound screening scans, aiding in the detection of potentially life-threatening conditions. However, these assessment methods can occasionally yield unreliable results. Advances in deep learning have opened up new avenues for automated measurements in fetal ultrasound, demonstrating human-level performance in various fetal ultrasound tasks. Nevertheless, the majority of these studies are retrospective in silico studies, with a limited number including African patients in their datasets. In this study we developed and prospectively assessed the performance of deep learning models for end-to-end automation of fetal biometry and amniotic fluid volume measurements. These models were trained using a newly constructed database of 172,293 de-identified Moroccan fetal ultrasound images, supplemented with publicly available datasets. the models were then tested on prospectively acquired video clips from 172 pregnant people forming a consecutive series gathered at four healthcare centers in Morocco. Our results demonstrate that the 95% limits of agreement between the models and practitioners for the studied measurements were narrower than the reported intra- and inter-observer variability among expert human sonographers for all the parameters under study. This means that these models could be deployed in clinical conditions, to alleviate time-consuming, repetitive tasks, and make fetal ultrasound more accessible in limited-resource environments.