Abstract:Invasive Coronary Angiography (ICA) is the clinical gold standard for the assessment of coronary artery disease. However, its interpretation remains subjective and prone to intra- and inter-operator variability. In this work, we introduce ODySSeI: an Open-source end-to-end framework for automated Detection, Segmentation, and Severity estimation of lesions in ICA images. ODySSeI integrates deep learning-based lesion detection and lesion segmentation models trained using a novel Pyramidal Augmentation Scheme (PAS) to enhance robustness and real-time performance across diverse patient cohorts (2149 patients from Europe, North America, and Asia). Furthermore, we propose a quantitative coronary angiography-free Lesion Severity Estimation (LSE) technique that directly computes the Minimum Lumen Diameter (MLD) and diameter stenosis from the predicted lesion geometry. Extensive evaluation on both in-distribution and out-of-distribution clinical datasets demonstrates ODySSeI's strong generalizability. Our PAS yields large performance gains in highly complex tasks as compared to relatively simpler ones, notably, a 2.5-fold increase in lesion detection performance versus a 1-3\% increase in lesion segmentation performance over their respective baselines. Our LSE technique achieves high accuracy, with predicted MLD values differing by only $\pm$ 2-3 pixels from the corresponding ground truths. On average, ODySSeI processes a raw ICA image within only a few seconds on a CPU and in a fraction of a second on a GPU and is available as a plug-and-play web interface at swisscardia.epfl.ch. Overall, this work establishes ODySSeI as a comprehensive and open-source framework which supports automated, reproducible, and scalable ICA analysis for real-time clinical decision-making.
Abstract:Accurate segmentation of coronary arteries remains a significant challenge in clinical practice, hindering the ability to effectively diagnose and manage coronary artery disease. The lack of large, annotated datasets for model training exacerbates this issue, limiting the development of automated tools that could assist radiologists. To address this, we introduce CM-UNet, which leverages self-supervised pre-training on unannotated datasets and transfer learning on limited annotated data, enabling accurate disease detection while minimizing the need for extensive manual annotations. Fine-tuning CM-UNet with only 18 annotated images instead of 500 resulted in a 15.2% decrease in Dice score, compared to a 46.5% drop in baseline models without pre-training. This demonstrates that self-supervised learning can enhance segmentation performance and reduce dependence on large datasets. This is one of the first studies to highlight the importance of self-supervised learning in improving coronary artery segmentation from X-ray angiography, with potential implications for advancing diagnostic accuracy in clinical practice. By enhancing segmentation accuracy in X-ray angiography images, the proposed approach aims to improve clinical workflows, reduce radiologists' workload, and accelerate disease detection, ultimately contributing to better patient outcomes. The source code is publicly available at https://github.com/CamilleChallier/Contrastive-Masked-UNet.