"Multilevel Multimodal Framework for Automatic Collateral Scoring in Br" by Rishi Raj, Dayananda Pruthviraja et al.
 

Multilevel Multimodal Framework for Automatic Collateral Scoring in Brain Stroke

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

IEEE Access

Abstract

In patients with ischemic brain stroke, collateral circulation plays a crucial role in selecting patients suitable for endovascular therapy. The presence of well-developed collaterals improves the patient's chances of recovery. In clinical practice, the presence of collaterals is diagnosed on a Computed Tomography Angiography scan. The radiologist grades it on the basis of subjective visual assessment, which is prone to interobserver and intraobserver variability. Computer-based methods of collateral assessment face the challenge of non-uniform scan volume, leading to manual selection of slices, meaning that the most imperative slices have to be manually selected by the radiologist. This paper proposes a multilevel multimodal hierarchical framework for automated collateral scoring. Specifically, we propose deploying a Convolutional Neural Network for image selection based on the visibility of collaterals and a multimodal model for comparing the occluded and contralateral sides of the brain for collateral scoring. We also generate a patient-level prediction by integrating automated machine learning in the proposed framework. While the proposed multimodal predictor contributes to Artificial Intelligence, the proposed end-to-end framework is an application in engineering. The proposed framework has been trained and tested on 116 patients, with five-fold cross-validation, achieving an accuracy of 91.17% for multi-class collateral scores and 94.118% for binary class collateral scores. The proposed multimodal predictor achieved a weighted F1 score of 0.86 and 0.95 on multi-class and binary-class collateral scores, respectively. The proposed framework is fast, efficient, and scalable for real-world deployments. Automated evaluation of collaterals with attention maps for explainability would complement radiologists' efforts. Code for the proposed framework is available at: https://github.com/rishiraj-cs/collaterals_ML_MM.

First Page

33730

Last Page

33748

DOI

10.1109/ACCESS.2024.3368504

Publication Date

1-1-2024

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