IVCVLGNov 22, 2021

Image prediction of disease progression by style-based manifold extrapolation

arXiv:2111.11439v25 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of early disease prediction for medical professionals, offering a generic solution with demonstrated improvements in diagnostic accuracy for osteoarthritis.

The paper tackled predicting disease progression risk and morphology from presymptomatic baseline data using a latent extrapolation optimization approach, achieving a specificity increase from 72.3% to 88.6% and sensitivity from 42.1% to 51.6% when synthetic follow-up images were provided to radiologists.

Disease-modifying management aims to prevent deterioration and progression of the disease, not just relieve symptoms. Unfortunately, the development of necessary therapies is often hampered by the failure to recognize the presymptomatic disease and limited understanding of disease development. We present a generic solution for this problem by a methodology that allows the prediction of progression risk and morphology in individuals using a latent extrapolation optimization approach. To this end, we combined a regularized generative adversarial network (GAN) and a latent nearest neighbor algorithm for joint optimization to generate plausible images of future time points. We evaluated our method on osteoarthritis (OA) data from a multi-center longitudinal study (the Osteoarthritis Initiative, OAI). With presymptomatic baseline data, our model is generative and significantly outperforms the end-to-end learning model in discriminating the progressive cohort. Two experiments were performed with seven experienced radiologists. When no synthetic follow-up radiographs were provided, our model performed better than all seven radiologists. In cases where the synthetic follow-ups generated by our model were available, the specificity and sensitivity of all readers in discriminating progressors increased from $72.3\%$ to $88.6\%$ and from $42.1\%$ to $51.6\%$, respectively. Our results open up a new possibility of using model-based morphology and risk prediction to make predictions about future disease occurrence, as demonstrated in the example of OA.

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