Artificial intelligence for the evaluation of peripheral artery disease using arterial Doppler waveforms to predict abnormal ankle-brachial index

Author:

McBane Robert D12ORCID,Murphree Dennis H3,Liedl David1,Lopez-Jimenez Francisco23,Attia Itzhak Zachi23,Arruda-Olson Adelaide2,Scott Christopher G4,Prodduturi Naresh5,Nowakowski Steve E6,Rooke Thom W12,Casanegra Ana I12ORCID,Wysokinski Waldemar E12,Swanson Keith E12,Houghton Damon E12ORCID,Bjarnason Haraldur17,Wennberg Paul W12

Affiliation:

1. Gonda Vascular Center, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

2. Cardiovascular Department, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

3. Department of Artificial Intelligence and Informatics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

4. Clinical Trials and Biostatics, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

5. Quantitative Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

6. Division of Engineering, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

7. Vascular and Interventional Radiology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA

Abstract

Background: Patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD) are at increased risk for major adverse limb and cardiac events including mortality. Developing screening tools capable of accurate PAD identification is a necessary first step for strategies of adverse outcome prevention. This study aimed to determine whether machine analysis of a resting Doppler waveform using deep neural networks can accurately identify patients with PAD. Methods: Consecutive patients (4/8/2015 – 12/31/2020) undergoing rest and postexercise ankle–brachial index (ABI) testing were included. Patients were randomly allocated to training, validation, and testing subsets (70%/15%/15%). Deep neural networks were trained on resting posterior tibial arterial Doppler waveforms to predict normal (> 0.9) or PAD (⩽ 0.9) using rest and postexercise ABI. A separate dataset of 151 patients who underwent testing during a period after the model had been created and validated (1/1/2021 – 3/31/2021) was used for secondary validation. Area under the receiver operating characteristic curves (AUC) were constructed to evaluate test performance. Results: Among 11,748 total patients, 3432 patients met study criteria: 1941 with PAD (mean age 69 ± 12 years) and 1491 without PAD (64 ± 14 years). The predictive model with highest performance identified PAD with an AUC 0.94 (CI = 0.92–0.96), sensitivity 0.83, specificity 0.88, accuracy 0.85, and positive predictive value (PPV) 0.90. Results were similar for the validation dataset: AUC 0.94 (CI = 0.91–0.98), sensitivity 0.91, specificity 0.85, accuracy 0.89, and PPV 0.89 (postexercise ABI comparison). Conclusion: An artificial intelligence-enabled analysis of a resting Doppler arterial waveform permits identification of PAD at a clinically relevant performance level.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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