Detailed Information on Publication Record
2024
Multi-channel delineation of intracardiac electrograms for arrhythmia substrate analysis using implicitly regularized convolutional neural network with wide receptive field
HEJC, Jakub, Richard REDINA, Jana KOLAROVA and Zdeněk STÁREKBasic information
Original name
Multi-channel delineation of intracardiac electrograms for arrhythmia substrate analysis using implicitly regularized convolutional neural network with wide receptive field
Authors
HEJC, Jakub (203 Czech Republic), Richard REDINA (203 Czech Republic), Jana KOLAROVA (203 Czech Republic) and Zdeněk STÁREK (203 Czech Republic, guarantor, belonging to the institution)
Edition
Biomedical Signal Processing and Control, London, ELSEVIER SCI LTD, 2024, 1746-8094
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Článek v odborném periodiku
Field of Study
30201 Cardiac and Cardiovascular systems
Country of publisher
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree
není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství
References:
Impact factor
Impact factor: 5.100 in 2022
Organization unit
Faculty of Medicine
UT WoS
001224357600001
Keywords in English
Cardiac electrophysiology; Local activation time; Arrhythmia mapping; Convolutional neural network; Wide receptive field; Dilated convolution
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Změněno: 20/8/2024 12:36, Mgr. Tereza Miškechová
Abstract
V originále
Objective: Automated segmentation of intracardiac electrograms and extraction of fundamental cycle length intervals is crucial for reproducible arrhythmia substrate analysis conducted during electrophysiology procedures. The objective of this study is to develop a robust, computationally efficient end-to-end model for the precise electrogram multi-channel delineation using a highly imbalanced dataset. Methods: A temporal deep convolutional neural network (CNN) based on the UNet architecture incorporating convolutional layers of varying dilation rates was implicitly regularized through data augmentations (DAs), a domain specific Tversky loss function, and distinct labelling strategies for segments comprising atrial fibrillation (AF). An exploratory study utilizing Bayesian search was conducted to optimize architectural and loss function hyperparameters. The impact of dilated convolutions, data augmentations, and labelling strategies on the performance and generalization capability was assessed through an ablation study. The performance of different models was evaluated using a cross-validation procedure and two independent test datasets derived from two separate patient cohorts containing 326, 84, and 97 electrograms encompassing sinus rhythms, abnormal complexes during ongoing tachycardias, and stimulation protocols. Results: A UNet model with optimized loss hyperparameters, a dilated receptive field, and atrial fibrillation (AF) annotated as a positive class (D-UNet-L) achieved an average S & oslash;rensen-Dice coefficient (SDC) of 84.9 % on recordings with regular atrial beats across test datasets, surpassing the performance of models without loss optimization (81.5 %), without dilated kernels (81.3 %), and with inversed AF labelling (77.5 %). Notably, the highest average accuracy (Acc) of 95.8 % for AF recordings was obtained by a model trained on negatively assigned AF segments, outperforming D-UNet-L (88.9 %), the model without loss optimization (81.5 %), and the model without dilated kernels (81.3 %). The reference D-UNet-L model exhibited overall root-mean-square errors of 8.3 and 9.0 ms across test datasets. Additionally, 61.5 % and 20.8 % of delineations exhibited absolute errors below 5 ms and 10 ms, respectively. Disabling data augmentation (DAs) resulted in a 2.7 % decrease in validation SDC and a 5.3 % increase in training SDC." Conclusion: Generalization capability across independent datasets was improved by employing exponentially weighted Tversky loss. The model's segmentation performance on longer sequences with atrial fibrillation was improved by incorporating dilated convolution kernels. Noise-aware and morphology data augmentations effectively mitigated overfitting potential in a limited training dataset. Label noise introduced by annotating atrial fibrillation sequences into a positive class strengthened regularization of the model, particularly in its ability to identify regular beats. However, it also negatively impacted performance on F-waves. Significance: The proposed method diminishes the dependence on manual measurements in complex electrophysiology measurements and enhances utilization of the collected electrophysiology data. The findings underscore the substantial impact of intrinsic regularization techniques and establish guidelines to facilitate methodological decision-making processes.