Machine Learning-Based Prediction of COVID-19 Severity and Progression to Critical Illness Using CT Imaging and Clinical Data

To develop a machine learning (ML) pipeline based on radiomics to predict Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) severity and the future deterioration to critical illness using CT and clinical variables. Clinical data were collected from 981 patients from a multi-institutional international cohort with...

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Veröffentlicht in:Korean journal of radiology 2021, 22(7), , pp.1213-1224
Hauptverfasser: Purkayastha, Subhanik, Xiao, Yanhe, Jiao, Zhicheng, Thepumnoeysuk, Rujapa, Halsey, Kasey, Wu, Jing, Tran, Thi My Linh, Hsieh, Ben, Choi, Ji Whae, Wang, Dongcui, Vallières, Martin, Wang, Robin, Collins, Scott, Feng, Xue, Feldman, Michael, Zhang, Paul J, Atalay, Michael, Sebro, Ronnie, Yang, Li, Fan, Yong, Liao, Wei Hua, Bai, Harrison X
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To develop a machine learning (ML) pipeline based on radiomics to predict Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) severity and the future deterioration to critical illness using CT and clinical variables. Clinical data were collected from 981 patients from a multi-institutional international cohort with real-time polymerase chain reaction-confirmed COVID-19. Radiomics features were extracted from chest CT of the patients. The data of the cohort were randomly divided into training, validation, and test sets using a 7:1:2 ratio. A ML pipeline consisting of a model to predict severity and time-to-event model to predict progression to critical illness were trained on radiomics features and clinical variables. The receiver operating characteristic area under the curve (ROC-AUC), concordance index (C-index), and time-dependent ROC-AUC were calculated to determine model performance, which was compared with consensus CT severity scores obtained by visual interpretation by radiologists. Among 981 patients with confirmed COVID-19, 274 patients developed critical illness. Radiomics features and clinical variables resulted in the best performance for the prediction of disease severity with a highest test ROC-AUC of 0.76 compared with 0.70 (0.76 vs. 0.70, = 0.023) for visual CT severity score and clinical variables. The progression prediction model achieved a test C-index of 0.868 when it was based on the combination of CT radiomics and clinical variables compared with 0.767 when based on CT radiomics features alone ( < 0.001), 0.847 when based on clinical variables alone ( = 0.110), and 0.860 when based on the combination of visual CT severity scores and clinical variables ( = 0.549). Furthermore, the model based on the combination of CT radiomics and clinical variables achieved time-dependent ROC-AUCs of 0.897, 0.933, and 0.927 for the prediction of progression risks at 3, 5 and 7 days, respectively. CT radiomics features combined with clinical variables were predictive of COVID-19 severity and progression to critical illness with fairly high accuracy.
ISSN:1229-6929
2005-8330
DOI:10.3348/kjr.2020.1104