论文标题
在外眼照片中检测隐藏的糖尿病迹象
Detecting hidden signs of diabetes in external eye photographs
论文作者
论文摘要
可以通过检查眼后检测与糖尿病相关的视网膜状况。相比之下,检查眼前的眼前可以揭示影响眼睛前部的条件,例如眼睑,角膜或晶体的变化。在这项工作中,我们研究了眼前的外部照片是否可以揭示对糖尿病性视网膜疾病和血糖控制的见解。我们使用来自一个美国一个州的301例糖尿病性视网膜病变(DR)筛查位点的145,832例糖尿病患者的外部眼部照片开发了深度学习系统(DLS),并评估了三个验证集中的DLS,其中包含来自美国18个州的198个地点的图像。在验证中,DLS设置了A(n = 27,415例患者,全部未灌输),DLS检测到血糖对照(HBA1C> 9%),接收器操作特征曲线(AUC)为70.2;中度或沃尔斯DR的AUC为75.3;糖尿病黄斑水肿,AUC为78.0;和危及视力的DR,AUC为79.4。对于所有4个预测任务,与使用可用的自我报告的基线特征(年龄,性别,性别,种族/种族,糖尿病年)相比,DLS的AUC更高(p <0.001)。就积极的预测价值而言,预测的前5%的患者的HBA1C> 9%的可能性为67%,并且有20%的机会威胁糖尿病性视网膜病。结果概括为扩张的学生(验证集B,5,058名患者)和不同的筛查服务(验证集C,10,402名患者)。我们的结果表明,外部眼睛照片包含对管理糖尿病患者的医疗保健提供者有用的信息,并可能有助于优先考虑患者进行面对面筛查。需要进一步的工作来验证不同设备和患者人群(没有糖尿病的人)以评估其远程诊断和管理的效用。
Diabetes-related retinal conditions can be detected by examining the posterior of the eye. By contrast, examining the anterior of the eye can reveal conditions affecting the front of the eye, such as changes to the eyelids, cornea, or crystalline lens. In this work, we studied whether external photographs of the front of the eye can reveal insights into both diabetic retinal diseases and blood glucose control. We developed a deep learning system (DLS) using external eye photographs of 145,832 patients with diabetes from 301 diabetic retinopathy (DR) screening sites in one US state, and evaluated the DLS on three validation sets containing images from 198 sites in 18 other US states. In validation set A (n=27,415 patients, all undilated), the DLS detected poor blood glucose control (HbA1c > 9%) with an area under receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 70.2; moderate-or-worse DR with an AUC of 75.3; diabetic macular edema with an AUC of 78.0; and vision-threatening DR with an AUC of 79.4. For all 4 prediction tasks, the DLS's AUC was higher (p<0.001) than using available self-reported baseline characteristics (age, sex, race/ethnicity, years with diabetes). In terms of positive predictive value, the predicted top 5% of patients had a 67% chance of having HbA1c > 9%, and a 20% chance of having vision threatening diabetic retinopathy. The results generalized to dilated pupils (validation set B, 5,058 patients) and to a different screening service (validation set C, 10,402 patients). Our results indicate that external eye photographs contain information useful for healthcare providers managing patients with diabetes, and may help prioritize patients for in-person screening. Further work is needed to validate these findings on different devices and patient populations (those without diabetes) to evaluate its utility for remote diagnosis and management.