Abstract WMP14: e-ASPECTS Improves Sensitivity to Early Ischemic Injury on Acute Computed Tomography Scans

Julia Chriashkova(Anglia Ruskin University), Nisha Menon(Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Annie Chakrabarti, Paul Guyler(Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Shyam Kelavkar(Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Annalu Kuhn(Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Johann Kulikovski(Saarland University), Gouri Koduri(Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), George Harston(Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust), Inam Haq(Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Anna Podlasek(University of Łódź), Christine Roffe(CK-CARE), Carlos Domínguez Álvarez(Hospital Privado), Kavita Vani(University of Mysore), Viola Wagner(Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust), Silke Walter(Saarland University), Iris Q. Grunwald(Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust)
Stroke
January 30, 2019
Cited by 4Open Access
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Abstract

Background: ASPECTS (Alberta Stroke Program Early CT Score) is a validated scoring system for assessment of early ischemic change (EIC) on CT head scans, which can be used to guide patient management and improve diagnostic accuracy. Detection of EIC can be challenging particularly for less experienced clinicians. e-ASPECTS software uses machine learning algorithms to support physicians in detecting EIC, which can be quantified using the ASPECTS score. Hypothesis: e-ASPECTS shortens time for CT scan assessment and improves agreement with reference standard ASPECTS when compared to blinded assessment. Methods: 26 clinicians (including 11 radiologists, 6 junior and 7 consultant stroke physicians, and 2 non-specialist physicians) independently scored 2560 ASPECTS regions from 64 patients for signs of EIC on non-contrast CT brain scans. These were acquired within 4.5 hours of stroke onset. A familiarization training set of 5 patients was used prior to scoring. Images were randomized to manual or software assistance. After two weeks images were rescored using the alternative method. Scorers were blinded to clinical symptoms. Reference standard scores were defined by an independent neuroradiologist with information on clinical symptoms, access to 24h follow-up, and with CT perfusion or MRI scans when available. Results: Mean NIHSS was 11. Mean time to score scans fell by 34% (45s, 2:12 to 1:27, mm:ss) using e-ASPECTS assistance. Rater agreement with ground truth was greatest in the radiologist cohort, but performance improved across all clinician categories using e-APSECTS assistance (radiology kappa: 0.26 to 0.38). Sensitivity to EIC improved by a factor of two across all clinician groups using e-ASPECTS assistance, and this was most marked for less experienced physicians. Conclusion: In acute ischemic stroke e-ASPECTS assisted analysis increased accuracy and reduced time for detection of EIC. Routine assistance of non-contrast CT interpretation has the potential to reduce treatment times and improve accuracy across clinicians and sites.


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