Abstract

Rapid and accurate assessment of endotracheal tube (ETT) location is essential in the intensive care unit (ICU) setting, where timely identification of a mispositioned support device may prevent significant patient morbidity and mortality. This study proposes a series of deep learning-based algorithms which together iteratively identify and localize the position of an ETT relative to the carina on chest radiographs. Using the open-source MIMIC Chest X-Ray (MIMIC-CXR) dataset, a total of 16,000 patients were identified (8000 patients with an ETT and 8000 patients without an ETT). Three different convolutional neural network (CNN) algorithms were created. First, a regression loss function CNN was trained to estimate the coordinate location of the carina, which was then used to crop the original radiograph to the distal trachea and proximal bronchi. Second, a classifier CNN was trained using the cropped inputs to determine the presence or absence of an ETT. Finally, for radiographs containing an ETT, a third regression CNN was trained to both refine the coordinate location of the carina and identify the location of the distal ETT tip. Model accuracy was assessed by comparing the absolute distance of prediction and ground-truth coordinates as well as CNN predictions relative to measurements documented in original radiologic reports. Upon five-fold cross validation, binary classification for the presence or absence of ETT demonstrated an accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, PPV, NPV, and AUC of 97.14%, 97.37%, 96.89%, 97.12%, 97.15%, and 99.58% respectively. CNN predicted coordinate location of the carina, and distal ETT tip was estimated within a median error of 0.46 cm and 0.60 cm from ground-truth annotations respectively. Overall final CNN assessment of distance between the carina and distal ETT tip was predicted within a median error of 0.60 cm from manual ground-truth annotations, and a median error of 0.66 cm from measurements documented in the original radiology reports. A serial cascaded CNN approach demonstrates high accuracy for both identification and localization of ETT tip and carina on chest radiographs. High performance of the proposed multi-step strategy is in part related to iterative refinement of coordinate localization as well as explicit image cropping which focuses algorithm attention to key anatomic regions of interest.

Highlights

  • An endotracheal tube (ETT) is a plastic airway device placed through the mouth into the trachea and connected to a breathing device to provide mechanical ventilation to the lungs. (Fig. 1) [1]

  • We propose a series of deep learning-based algorithms for identification and localization of ETT position relative to the carina from chest radiographs

  • Deep learning convolutional neural networks (CNN) are a specific form of data-driven machine learning with the capacity for self-organized feature extraction

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Summary

Introduction

An endotracheal tube (ETT) is a plastic airway device placed through the mouth into the trachea and connected to a breathing device to provide mechanical ventilation to the lungs. (Fig. 1) [1]. An endotracheal tube (ETT) is a plastic airway device placed through the mouth into the trachea and connected to a breathing device to provide mechanical ventilation to the lungs. Optimal positioning of an ETT is essential for therapeutic effect and is commonly cited to be approximately 5 ± 2 cm above the carina [2]. A misplaced ETT may often result in serious complications including the collapse or hyperinflation of a lung [3], the overall risk of which may be as high as 40% in the ICU setting [4]. ETT position is typically assessed using a frontal chest radiograph. Due to high clinical volume, the delay in average turnaround time (TAT) for emergent chest radiographs is approximately 22.89 min [5]. An objective and accurate tool for characterization of ETT location

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