The role of haemorrhage and exudate detection in automated grading of diabetic retinopathy
Background/aimsAutomated grading has the potential to improve the efficiency of diabetic retinopathy screening services. While disease/no disease grading can be performed using only microaneurysm detection and image-quality assessment, automated recognition of other types of lesions may be advantage...
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Veröffentlicht in: | British journal of ophthalmology 2010-06, Vol.94 (6), p.706-711 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background/aimsAutomated grading has the potential to improve the efficiency of diabetic retinopathy screening services. While disease/no disease grading can be performed using only microaneurysm detection and image-quality assessment, automated recognition of other types of lesions may be advantageous. This study investigated whether inclusion of automated recognition of exudates and haemorrhages improves the detection of observable/referable diabetic retinopathy.MethodsImages from 1253 patients with observable/referable retinopathy and 6333 patients with non-referable retinopathy were obtained from three grading centres. All images were reference-graded, and automated disease/no disease assessments were made based on microaneurysm detection and combined microaneurysm, exudate and haemorrhage detection.ResultsIntroduction of algorithms for exudates and haemorrhages resulted in a statistically significant increase in the sensitivity for detection of observable/referable retinopathy from 94.9% (95% CI 93.5 to 96.0) to 96.6% (95.4 to 97.4) without affecting manual grading workload.ConclusionAutomated detection of exudates and haemorrhages improved the detection of observable/referable retinopathy. |
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ISSN: | 0007-1161 1468-2079 |
DOI: | 10.1136/bjo.2008.149807 |