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    Home»Health»AI Predicts Future Heart Disease Risk Using Single Chest X-Ray
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    AI Predicts Future Heart Disease Risk Using Single Chest X-Ray

    By Radiological Society of North AmericaNovember 29, 20226 Comments4 Mins Read
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    Normal Chest X-Ray
    Normal chest X-ray. Credit: Radiological Society of North America

    The CXR-CVD risk deep learning model predicts 10-year cardiovascular disease risk using a single chest X-ray, offering performance comparable to clinical standards.

    A deep learning model that uses a single chest X-ray to predict the 10-year risk of death from a heart attack or stroke, stemming from atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease has been developed by researchers. Results of the study were presented today (November 29) at the annual meeting of the Radiological Society of North America (RSNA).

    Deep learning is an advanced type of artificial intelligence (AI) that can be trained to search X-ray images to find patterns associated with disease.

    “Our deep learning model offers a potential solution for population-based opportunistic screening of cardiovascular disease risk using existing chest X-ray images,” said the study’s lead author, Jakob Weiss, M.D., a radiologist affiliated with the Cardiovascular Imaging Research Center at Massachusetts General Hospital and the AI in Medicine program at the Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. “This type of screening could be used to identify individuals who would benefit from statin medication but are currently untreated.”

    Current guidelines recommend estimating 10-year risk of major adverse cardiovascular disease events to establish who should get a statin for primary prevention.

    “Based on a single existing chest X-ray image, our deep learning model predicts future major adverse cardiovascular events with similar performance and incremental value to the established clinical standard.” Jakob Weiss, M.D.

    Leveraging AI for Accessible Cardiovascular Screening

    This risk is calculated using the atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) risk score, a statistical model that considers a host of variables, including age, sex, race, systolic blood pressure, hypertension treatment, smoking, Type 2 diabetes, and blood tests. Statin medication is recommended for patients with a 10-year risk of 7.5% or higher.

    “The variables necessary to calculate ASCVD risk are often not available, which makes approaches for population-based screening desirable,” Dr. Weiss said. “As chest X-rays are commonly available, our approach may help identify individuals at high risk.”

    Dr. Weiss and a team of researchers trained a deep learning model using a single chest X-ray (CXR) input. They developed the model, known as CXR-CVD risk, to predict the risk of death from cardiovascular disease using 147,497 chest X-rays from 40,643 participants in the Prostate, Lung, Colorectal, and Ovarian Cancer Screening Trial, a multi-center, randomized controlled trial designed and sponsored by the National Cancer Institute.

    “We’ve long recognized that X-rays capture information beyond traditional diagnostic findings, but we haven’t used this data because we haven’t had robust, reliable methods,” Dr. Weiss said. “Advances in AI are making it possible now.”

    The researchers tested the model using a second independent cohort of 11,430 outpatients (mean age 60.1 years; 42.9% male) who had a routine outpatient chest X-ray at Mass General Brigham and were potentially eligible for statin therapy.

    Of 11,430 patients, 1,096, or 9.6%, suffered a major adverse cardiac event over the median follow-up of 10.3 years. There was a significant association between the risk predicted by the CXR-CVD risk deep learning model and observed major cardiac events.

    Bridging Gaps in Data-Driven Risk Assessment

    The researchers also compared the prognostic value of the model to the established clinical standard for deciding statin eligibility. This could be calculated in only 2,401 patients (21%) due to missing data (e.g., blood pressure, cholesterol) in the electronic record. For this subset of patients, the CXR-CVD risk model performed similarly to the established clinical standard and even provided incremental value.

    “The beauty of this approach is you only need an X-ray, which is acquired millions of times a day across the world,” Dr. Weiss said. “Based on a single existing chest X-ray image, our deep learning model predicts future major adverse cardiovascular events with similar performance and incremental value to the established clinical standard.”

    Dr. Weiss said additional research, including a controlled, randomized trial, is necessary to validate the deep learning model, which could ultimately serve as a decision-support tool for treating physicians.

    “What we’ve shown is a chest X-ray is more than a chest X-ray,” Dr. Weiss said. “With an approach like this, we get a quantitative measure, which allows us to provide both diagnostic and prognostic information that helps the clinician and the patient.”

    Co-authors are Vineet Raghu, Ph.D., Kaavya Paruchuri, M.D., Pradeep Natarajan, M.D., M.M.S.C., Hugo Aerts, Ph.D., and Michael T. Lu, M.D., M.P.H. Investigators were supported in part by funding from the National Academy of Medicine and the American Heart Association.

    Meeting: 108th Scientific Assembly and Annual Meeting of the Radiological Society of North America

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    Cardiology Heart Popular Radiological Society of North America
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    6 Comments

    1. John on November 30, 2022 7:36 am

      This will never be made common because it’ll cost the healthcare industry money.

      Reply
    2. steve on November 30, 2022 8:26 am

      What do you mean by “a significant association between the risk predicted by the CXR-CVD risk deep learning model and observed major cardiac events”? How significant of an association was it? What exactly do you mean by “association”? How frequent were major cardiac events in the cohort that was not predicted to have major cardiac event?

      Reply
    3. Detail on November 30, 2022 1:46 pm

      How differently predictive is this from just bmi, though? AI could just be seeing obesity, effectively, through this.

      Reply
    4. Michael on November 30, 2022 5:47 pm

      I would have been impressed if they used the model to predict before hand and then see if the prediction was accurate, but it looks like the model was making predictions where the outcome was already known.

      Reply
    5. Saamiya Musani on December 1, 2022 8:35 pm

      What is the probability between cardiac issues and x-ray prediction? Any other studies carried out? P value? Unless there is a netastudy published, I am diagnosing my patients old fashioned way.

      Reply
    6. Prabhat Kumar on December 5, 2022 6:20 pm

      How can we get full research paper?

      Reply
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