Scientific Reports (Oct 2023)

Screening COVID-19 by Swaasa AI platform using cough sounds: a cross-sectional study

  • Padmalatha Pentakota,
  • Gowrisree Rudraraju,
  • Narayana Rao Sripada,
  • Baswaraj Mamidgi,
  • Charishma Gottipulla,
  • Charan Jalukuru,
  • Shubha Deepti Palreddy,
  • Nikhil Kumar Reddy Bhoge,
  • Priyanka Firmal,
  • Venkat Yechuri,
  • Manmohan Jain,
  • Venkata Sudhakar Peddireddi,
  • Devi Madhavi Bhimarasetty,
  • S. Sreenivas,
  • Kesava Lakshmi Prasad K,
  • Niranjan Joshi,
  • Shibu Vijayan,
  • Sanchit Turaga,
  • Vardhan Avasarala

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-023-45104-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

Read online

Abstract The Advent of Artificial Intelligence (AI) has led to the use of auditory data for detecting various diseases, including COVID-19. SARS-CoV-2 infection has claimed more than six million lives to date and therefore, needs a robust screening technique to control the disease spread. In the present study we created and validated the Swaasa AI platform, which uses the signature cough sound and symptoms presented by patients to screen and prioritize COVID-19 patients. We collected cough data from 234 COVID-19 suspects to validate our Convolutional Neural Network (CNN) architecture and Feedforward Artificial Neural Network (FFANN) (tabular features) based algorithm. The final output from both models was combined to predict the likelihood of having the disease. During the clinical validation phase, our model showed a 75.54% accuracy rate in detecting the likely presence of COVID-19, with 95.45% sensitivity and 73.46% specificity. We conducted pilot testing on 183 presumptive COVID subjects, of which 58 were truly COVID-19 positive, resulting in a Positive Predictive Value of 70.73%. Due to the high cost and technical expertise required for currently available rapid screening methods, there is a need for a cost-effective and remote monitoring tool that can serve as a preliminary screening method for potential COVID-19 subjects. Therefore, Swaasa would be highly beneficial in detecting the disease and could have a significant impact in reducing its spread.