Deep learning-based prospective slice tracking for continuous catheter visualization during MRI-guided cardiac catheterization.
Authors
Affiliations (3)
Affiliations (3)
- School of Biomedical Engineering and Imaging Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences and Medicine, King's College London, London, UK.
- MR Research Collaborations, Siemens Healthcare Limited, Camberley, UK.
- Department of Paediatric Cardiology, Evelina London Children's Hospital, London, UK.
Abstract
This proof-of-concept study introduces a novel, deep learning-based, parameter-free, automatic slice-tracking technique for continuous catheter tracking and visualization during MR-guided cardiac catheterization. The proposed sequence includes Calibration and Runtime modes. Initially, Calibration mode identifies the catheter tip's three-dimensional coordinates using a fixed stack of contiguous slices. A U-Net architecture with a ResNet-34 encoder is used to identify the catheter tip location. Once identified, the sequence then switches to Runtime mode, dynamically acquiring three contiguous slices automatically centered on the catheter tip. The catheter location is estimated from each Runtime stack using the same network and fed back to the sequence, enabling prospective slice tracking to keep the catheter in the central slice. If the catheter remains unidentified over several dynamics, the sequence reverts to Calibration mode. This artificial intelligence (AI)-based approach was evaluated prospectively in a three-dimensional-printed heart phantom and 3 patients undergoing MR-guided cardiac catheterization. This technique was also compared retrospectively in 2 patients with a previous non-AI automatic tracking method relying on operator-defined parameters. In the phantom study, the tracking framework achieved 100% accuracy/sensitivity/specificity in both modes. Across all patients, the average accuracy/sensitivity/specificity were 100 ± 0/100 ± 0/100 ± 0% (Calibration) and 98.4 ± 0.8/94.1 ± 2.9/100.0 ± 0.0% (Runtime). The parametric, non-AI technique and the proposed parameter-free AI-based framework yielded identical accuracy (100%) in Calibration mode and similar accuracy range in Runtime mode (Patients 1 and 2: 100%-97%, and 100%-98%, respectively). An AI-based prospective slice-tracking framework was developed for real-time, parameter-free, operator-independent, automatic tracking of gadolinium-filled balloon catheters. Its feasibility was successfully demonstrated in patients undergoing MRI-guided cardiac catheterization.