TY - JOUR
T1 - Deep learning-based prediction of mortality using brain midline shift and clinical information
AU - Wu, An Rong
AU - Hsieh, Sun Yuan
AU - Chou, Hsin Hung
AU - Lai, Cheng Shih
AU - Hung, Jo Ying
AU - Wang, Bow
AU - Tsai, Yi Shan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors
PY - 2025/1/30
Y1 - 2025/1/30
N2 - Brain midline shift (MLS) indicates the severity of mass effect from intracranial lesions such as traumatic brain injury, stroke, brain tumor, or hematoma. Brain MLS can be used to determine whether patients require emergency surgery and to predict patients' prognosis. Since brain MLS is usually emergent, it must be diagnosed immediately. Therefore, this study presents a computer-aided deep-learning method for detecting MLS, aiming to predict mortality in a prognosis-predicting cohort using brain MLS and clinical in-formation. The brain midline is a 3-dimensional structure, but computed tomography (CT) slices are 2-dimensional which limits brain MLS detection. Here we propose a keypoint detection method to detect brain midline on each CT slice, acquiring brain MLS distance and area in each slice. Combined with clinical information, patient mortality can be predicted using the multilayer perceptron (MLP) model. The accuracy, precision, sensitivity, specificity, and F1-score for slice selection with the proposed model are 0.966, 0.952, 0.991, 0.932, and 0.971, respectively. Both MLS distance and volume were precisely predicted at slice-level and case-level with only the slightest error. The detected midlines were clearly separated into left and right brain with a dice coefficient of 0.98. The accuracy and AUC of the MLP model were both above 0.8. The model detected large brain MLS cases well in the prediction of outcomes in the prognosis-predicting cohort. The method performs well on slice selection and brain MLS detection, and predictions of MLS distance and volume combined with clinical information predicts the patient's prognosis well.
AB - Brain midline shift (MLS) indicates the severity of mass effect from intracranial lesions such as traumatic brain injury, stroke, brain tumor, or hematoma. Brain MLS can be used to determine whether patients require emergency surgery and to predict patients' prognosis. Since brain MLS is usually emergent, it must be diagnosed immediately. Therefore, this study presents a computer-aided deep-learning method for detecting MLS, aiming to predict mortality in a prognosis-predicting cohort using brain MLS and clinical in-formation. The brain midline is a 3-dimensional structure, but computed tomography (CT) slices are 2-dimensional which limits brain MLS detection. Here we propose a keypoint detection method to detect brain midline on each CT slice, acquiring brain MLS distance and area in each slice. Combined with clinical information, patient mortality can be predicted using the multilayer perceptron (MLP) model. The accuracy, precision, sensitivity, specificity, and F1-score for slice selection with the proposed model are 0.966, 0.952, 0.991, 0.932, and 0.971, respectively. Both MLS distance and volume were precisely predicted at slice-level and case-level with only the slightest error. The detected midlines were clearly separated into left and right brain with a dice coefficient of 0.98. The accuracy and AUC of the MLP model were both above 0.8. The model detected large brain MLS cases well in the prediction of outcomes in the prognosis-predicting cohort. The method performs well on slice selection and brain MLS detection, and predictions of MLS distance and volume combined with clinical information predicts the patient's prognosis well.
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U2 - 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e41271
DO - 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e41271
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85215118834
SN - 2405-8440
VL - 11
JO - Heliyon
JF - Heliyon
IS - 2
M1 - e41271
ER -