End-to-end deep learning model for predicting treatment requirements in neovascular AMD from longitudinal retinal OCT imaging.

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Abstract

Neovascular age-related macular degeneration (nAMD) is nowadays successfully treated with anti-VEGF substances, but interindividual treatment requirements are vastly heterogeneous and currently poorly plannable resulting in suboptimal treatment frequency. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) with its 3D high-resolution imaging serves as a companion diagnostic to anti-VEGF therapy. This creates a need for building predictive models using automated image analysis of OCT scans acquired during the treatment initiation phase. We propose such a model based on deep learning (DL) architecture, comprised of a densely connected neural network (DenseNet) and a recurrent neural network (RNN), trainable end-to-end. The method starts by sampling several 2D-images from an OCT volume to obtain a lower-dimensional OCT representation. At the core of the predictive model, the DenseNet learns useful retinal spatial features while the RNN integrates information from different time points. The introduced model was evaluated on the prediction of anti-VEGF treatment requirements in nAMD patients treated under a pro-re-nata (PRN) regimen. The DL model was trained on 281 patients and evaluated on a hold-out test set of 69 patient. The predictive model achieved a concordance index of 0.7 in regressing the number of received treatments, while in a classification task it obtained an 0.85 (0.81) AUC in detecting the patients with low (high) treatment requirements. The proposed model outperformed previous machine learning strategies that relied on a set of spatio-temporal image features, showing that the proposed DL architecture successfully learned to extract the relevant spatio-temporal patterns directly from raw longitudinal OCT images.

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