LGApr 11, 2024

The OxMat dataset: a multimodal resource for the development of AI-driven technologies in maternal and newborn child health

arXiv:2404.08024v111 citationsh-index: 6
AI Analysis

This provides a foundational resource for developing AI in obstetric care, particularly for antepartum fetal monitoring, but is incremental as it focuses on data collection rather than novel methods.

The paper introduces the OxMat dataset, the world's largest curated dataset of cardiotocography (CTG) recordings with over 177,211 unique CTGs and extensive clinical data, addressing gaps in women's health data for AI-driven maternal and newborn child health technologies.

The rapid advancement of Artificial Intelligence (AI) in healthcare presents a unique opportunity for advancements in obstetric care, particularly through the analysis of cardiotocography (CTG) for fetal monitoring. However, the effectiveness of such technologies depends upon the availability of large, high-quality datasets that are suitable for machine learning. This paper introduces the Oxford Maternity (OxMat) dataset, the world's largest curated dataset of CTGs, featuring raw time series CTG data and extensive clinical data for both mothers and babies, which is ideally placed for machine learning. The OxMat dataset addresses the critical gap in women's health data by providing over 177,211 unique CTG recordings from 51,036 pregnancies, carefully curated and reviewed since 1991. The dataset also comprises over 200 antepartum, intrapartum and postpartum clinical variables, ensuring near-complete data for crucial outcomes such as stillbirth and acidaemia. While this dataset also covers the intrapartum stage, around 94% of the constituent CTGS are antepartum. This allows for a unique focus on the underserved antepartum period, in which early detection of at-risk fetuses can significantly improve health outcomes. Our comprehensive review of existing datasets reveals the limitations of current datasets: primarily, their lack of sufficient volume, detailed clinical data and antepartum data. The OxMat dataset lays a foundation for future AI-driven prenatal care, offering a robust resource for developing and testing algorithms aimed at improving maternal and fetal health outcomes.

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