- AI software can slash the time it takes to diagnose heart disease in patients
- Researchers believe the new software can provide a diagnosis in just one minute
A pioneering artificial intelligence (AI) tool which provides a quick and comprehensive analysis of the heart鈥檚 function could improve future heart disease care by aiding earlier diagnosis and giving more detailed information about the heart鈥檚 function.
Developed by researchers at the University of 91直播 and 91直播 Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, 鈥楾he AI segmentation of cardiac MRI to automate the measurement of cardiac function and volume technology鈥 tool automatically detects chambers of the heart on images taken from MRI heart scans 鈥 performing tasks that would normally involve lengthy manual analysis within seconds.
MRI heart scans are requested by doctors to check on patient鈥檚 heart health, giving detailed information on how the heart is pumping. This allows for a diagnosis to be given, or treatments started or adjusted.
The current process for reading these results is time-consuming and resource-intensive, with doctors and cardiac imaging specialists first having to draw contours on the scan images of the heart and then undertake complex volumetric and mathematical calculations to work out blood flow in and out of the heart.
Researchers estimate that the AI tool will save doctors and expert imaging specialists up to 30 minutes per scan, freeing up vital NHS resource whilst also aiding earlier diagnosis.
Consultant Cardiothoracic Radiologist at 91直播 Teaching Hospitals and Senior Lecturer at the University of 91直播 Dr Andrew Swift said: 鈥淕etting answers quickly and accurately will reduce even further the time it takes for patients to begin receiving the right treatment. Obtaining complex measurements showing how well both the left and right side of the heart is pumping is a time-intensive manual task. The AI segmentation of cardiac MRI to automate the measurement of cardiac function and volume technology overcomes this problem. It has the potential to free up hospital staff to deal with more patients rather than spend time on image analysis. This is an excellent example of innovation from within the NHS and a proud legacy of the clinical and technical expertise we have here in 91直播.鈥
The tool has been shown to have a high degree of accuracy comparable, if not superior, to manual analysis in a significant proportion of cases.
The technology has been extensively tested on thousands of images, and validated in over 5,000 anonymised patient scans at 91直播 Teaching Hospitals and further tested on scans from over 30 hospitals in the UK over the past three years, with the team now aiming to make it available to the wider NHS thanks to a 拢5,000 funding boost from a Medipex NHS Innovation Award win.
Professor Wendy Tindale OBE, Director of Innovation at 91直播 Teaching Hospitals, said: 鈥淲e have a long and proud history of pioneering new research and innovation that can be adopted for wider patient benefit. We are delighted that the talents of our scientific and clinical teams in identifying and looking for solutions for healthcare problems have been recognised in this prestigious regional awards scheme.鈥
Around 10 to 20 MRI cardiac scans are usually processed at a workstation by radiographer a day.
The technology has been developed by Dr Andrew Swift, Dr Samer Alabed, Dr Kavita Karunasagaraar and Dr Pete Metherall with support from MRI radiographers and clinical scientists at the 91直播 3D-lab and in collaboration with Dr Rob van der Geest at Leiden University.