Orthognathic surgical planning using graph CNN with dual embedding module: External validations with multi-hospital datasets

•The accuracy of predicting surgical movements was improved by incorporating the topological structure of the landmarks into the model, instead of relying solely on lat-ceph.•In both internal and external tests, DEM-GCNN did not exhibit significant difference from ground truth in all landmarks.•We d...

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Veröffentlicht in:Computer methods and programs in biomedicine 2023-12, Vol.242, p.107853-107853, Article 107853
Hauptverfasser: Kim, In-Hwan, Kim, Jun-Sik, Jeong, Jiheon, Park, Jae-Woo, Park, Kanggil, Cho, Jin-Hyoung, Hong, Mihee, Kang, Kyung-Hwa, Kim, Minji, Kim, Su-Jung, Kim, Yoon-Ji, Sung, Sang-Jin, Kim, Young Ho, Lim, Sung-Hoon, Baek, Seung-Hak, Kim, Namkug
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•The accuracy of predicting surgical movements was improved by incorporating the topological structure of the landmarks into the model, instead of relying solely on lat-ceph.•In both internal and external tests, DEM-GCNN did not exhibit significant difference from ground truth in all landmarks.•We developed a robust OGS planning model with maximized generalizability despite diverse qualities of lat-cephs from 9 institutions. Despite recent development of AI, prediction of the surgical movement in the maxilla and mandible by OGS might be more difficult than that of tooth movement by orthodontic treatment. To evaluate the prediction accuracy of the surgical movement using pairs of pre-(T0) and post-surgical (T1) lateral cephalograms (lat-ceph) of orthognathic surgery (OGS) patients and dual embedding module-graph convolution neural network (DEM-GCNN) model. 599 pairs from 3 institutions were used as training, internal validation, and internal test sets and 201 pairs from other 6 institutions were used as external test set. DEM-GCNN model (IEM, learning the lat-ceph images; LTEM, learning the landmarks) was developed to predict the amount and direction of surgical movement of ANS and PNS in the maxilla and B-point and Md1crown in the mandible. The distance between T1 landmark coordinates actually moved by OGS (ground truth) and predicted by DEM-GCNN model and pre-existed CNN-based Model-C (learning the lat-ceph images) was compared. In both internal and external tests, DEM-GCNN did not exhibit significant difference from ground truth in all landmarks (ANS, PNS, B-point, Md1crown, all P > 0.05). When the accumulated successful detection rate for each landmark was compared, DEM-GCNN showed higher values than Model-C in both the internal and external tests. In violin plots exhibiting the error distribution of the prediction results, both internal and external tests showed that DEM-GCNN had significant performance improvement in PNS, ANS, B-point, Md1crown than Model-C. DEM-GCNN showed significantly lower prediction error values than Model-C (one-jaw surgery, B-point, Md1crown, all P 
ISSN:0169-2607
1872-7565
DOI:10.1016/j.cmpb.2023.107853