Abstract

Oral chemolysis is an effective and non-invasive treatment for uric acid urinary stones. This study aimed to classify urinary stones into either pure uric acid (pUA) or other composition (Others) using non-contrast-enhanced computed tomography scans (NCCTs). Instances managed at our institution from 2019 to 2021 were screened. They were labeled as either pUA or Others based upon composition analyses, and randomly split into training or testing data set. Several instances contained multiple NCCTs which were all collected. In each of NCCTs, individual urinary stone was treated as individual sample. From manually drawn volumes of interest, we extracted original and wavelet radiomics features for each sample. The most important features were then selected via the Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator for building the final model on a Support Vector Machine. Performance on the testing set was evaluated via accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and area under the precision-recall curve (AUPRC). There were 302 instances, of which 118 had pUA urinary stones, generating 576 samples in total. From 851 original and wavelet radiomics features extracted for each sample, 10 most important features were ultimately selected. On the testing data set, accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, and AUPRC were 93.9%, 97.9%, 92.2%, and 0.958, respectively, for per-sample prediction, and 90.8%, 100%, 87.5%, and 0.902, respectively, for per-instance prediction. The machine learning algorithm trained with radiomics features from NCCTs can accurately predict pUA urinary stones. Our work suggests a potential assisting tool for stone disease treatment selection.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call