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FasterRib: A deep learning algorithm to automate identification and characterization of rib fractures on chest computed tomography scans.

Authors :
Edamadaka S
Brown DW
Swaroop R
Kolodner M
Spain DA
Forrester JD
Choi J
Source :
The journal of trauma and acute care surgery [J Trauma Acute Care Surg] 2023 Aug 01; Vol. 95 (2), pp. 181-185. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Mar 06.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Objective: Characterizing and enumerating rib fractures are critical to informing clinical decisions, yet in-depth characterization is rarely performed because of the manual burden of annotating these injuries on computed tomography (CT) scans. We hypothesized that our deep learning model, FasterRib , could predict the location and percentage displacement of rib fractures using chest CT scans.<br />Methods: The development and internal validation cohort comprised more than 4,700 annotated rib fractures from 500 chest CT scans within the public RibFrac. We trained a convolutional neural network to predict bounding boxes around each fracture per CT slice. Adapting an existing rib segmentation model, FasterRib outputs the three-dimensional locations of each fracture (rib number and laterality). A deterministic formula analyzed cortical contact between bone segments to compute percentage displacements. We externally validated our model on our institution's data set.<br />Results: FasterRib predicted precise rib fracture locations with 0.95 sensitivity, 0.90 precision, 0.92 f1 score, with an average of 1.3 false-positive fractures per scan. On external validation, FasterRib achieved 0.97 sensitivity, 0.96 precision, and 0.97 f1 score, and 2.24 false-positive fractures per scan. Our publicly available algorithm automatically outputs the location and percent displacement of each predicted rib fracture for multiple input CT scans.<br />Conclusion: We built a deep learning algorithm that automates rib fracture detection and characterization using chest CT scans. FasterRib achieved the highest recall and the second highest precision among known algorithms in literature. Our open source code could facilitate FasterRib's adaptation for similar computer vision tasks and further improvements via large-scale external validation.<br />Level of Evidence: Diagnostic Tests/Criteria; Level III.<br /> (Copyright © 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2163-0763
Volume :
95
Issue :
2
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The journal of trauma and acute care surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36872505
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1097/TA.0000000000003913