Abstract

ObjectivesQuantitative CT imaging is an important emphysema biomarker, especially in smoking cohorts, but does not always correlate to radiologists’ visual CT assessments. The objectives were to develop and validate a neural network-based slice-wise whole-lung emphysema score (SWES) for chest CT, to validate SWES on unseen CT data, and to compare SWES with a conventional quantitative CT method.Materials and methodsSeparate cohorts were used for algorithm development and validation. For validation, thin-slice CT stacks from 474 participants in the prospective cross-sectional Swedish CArdioPulmonary bioImage Study (SCAPIS) were included, 395 randomly selected and 79 from an emphysema cohort. Spirometry (FEV1/FVC) and radiologists’ visual emphysema scores (sum-visual) obtained at inclusion in SCAPIS were used as reference tests. SWES was compared with a commercially available quantitative emphysema scoring method (LAV950) using Pearson’s correlation coefficients and receiver operating characteristics (ROC) analysis.ResultsSWES correlated more strongly with the visual scores than LAV950 (r = 0.78 vs. r = 0.41, p < 0.001). The area under the ROC curve for the prediction of airway obstruction was larger for SWES than for LAV950 (0.76 vs. 0.61, p = 0.007). SWES correlated more strongly with FEV1/FVC than either LAV950 or sum-visual in the full cohort (r = − 0.69 vs. r = − 0.49/r = − 0.64, p < 0.001/p = 0.007), in the emphysema cohort (r = − 0.77 vs. r = − 0.69/r = − 0.65, p = 0.03/p = 0.002), and in the random sample (r = − 0.39 vs. r = − 0.26/r = − 0.25, p = 0.001/p = 0.007).ConclusionThe slice-wise whole-lung emphysema score (SWES) correlates better than LAV950 with radiologists’ visual emphysema scores and correlates better with airway obstruction than do LAV950 and radiologists’ visual scores.Clinical relevance statementThe slice-wise whole-lung emphysema score provides quantitative emphysema information for CT imaging that avoids the disadvantages of threshold-based scores and is correlated more strongly with reference tests than LAV950 and reader visual scores.Key Points• A slice-wise whole-lung emphysema score (SWES) was developed to quantify emphysema in chest CT images.• SWES identified visual emphysema and spirometric airflow limitation significantly better than threshold-based score (LAV950).• SWES improved emphysema quantification in CT images, which is especially useful in large-scale research.

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