TY - EJOU AU - Zhang, Caining AU - Guo, Xiaopeng AU - Guo, Xiaoya AU - Molony, David AU - Li, Huaguang AU - Samady, Habib AU - Giddens, Don P. AU - Athanasiou, Lambros AU - Tang, Dalin AU - Nie, Rencan AU - Cao, Jinde TI - Machine Learning Model Comparison for Automatic Segmentation of Intracoronary Optical Coherence Tomography and Plaque Cap Thickness Quantification T2 - Computer Modeling in Engineering \& Sciences PY - 2020 VL - 123 IS - 2 SN - 1526-1506 AB - Optical coherence tomography (OCT) is a new intravascular imaging technique with high resolution and could provide accurate morphological infor￾mation for plaques in coronary arteries. However, its segmentation is still com￾monly performed manually by experts which is time-consuming. The aim of this study was to develop automatic techniques to characterize plaque components and quantify plaque cap thickness using 3 machine learning methods including convolutional neural network (CNN) with U-Net architecture, CNN with Fully convolutional DenseNet (FC-DenseNet) architecture and support vector machine (SVM). In vivo OCT and intravascular ultrasound (IVUS) images were acquired from two patients at Emory University with informed consent obtained. Eighteen OCT image slices which included lipid core and with acceptable image quality were selected for our study. Manual segmentation from imaging experts was used as the gold standard for model training and validation. Since OCT has limited penetration, virtual histology IVUS was combined with OCT data to improve reliability. A 3-fold cross-validation method was used for model training and vali￾dation. The overall tissue classification accuracy for the 18 slices studied (total classification database sample size was 8580096 pixels) was 96.36% and 92.72% for U-Net and FC-DenseNet, respectively. The best average prediction accuracy for lipid was 91.29% based on SVM, compared to 82.84% and 78.91% from U-Net and FC-DenseNet, respectively. The overall average accuracy (Acc) differentiating lipid and fibrous tissue were 95.58%, 92.33% and 81.84% for U-Net, FC-DenseNet and SVM, respectively. The average errors of U-Net, FC-DenseNet and SVM from the 18 slices for cap thickness quantification were 8.83%, 10.71% and 15.85%. The average relative errors of minimum cap thick￾ness from 18 slices of U-Net, FC-DenseNet and SVM were 17.46%, 13.06% This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Computer Modeling in Engineering & Sciences DOI:10.32604/cmes.2020.09718 Article Tech Science Press and 22.20%, respectively. To conclude, CNN-based segmentation methods can better characterize plaque compositions and quantify plaque cap thickness on OCT images and are more likely to be used in the clinical arena. Large-scale studies are needed to further develop the methods and validate our findings. KW - Image segmentation; plaque; cap thickness; OCT; CNN; SVM DO - 10.32604/cmes.2020.09718