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Eye scanner that can detect stroke risk developed by Chinese University
CUHK Develops an Automatic Retinal Image Analysis System to Help Diabetes Patients and Elderly Prevent Stroke
A computer program that scans images of patients' eyes may offer a cheap and speedy way to identify people at risk of a stroke. Developed by Chinese University researchers, the system automatically checks blood vessels from retinal images to identify potential stroke victims. Tests have shown it to be up to 90 per cent accurate and it may go into widespread use after three more years of study. "Our aim is to popularise the system so that more people can be detected before they get a stroke," said Professor Benny Zee Chung-ying, head of the university's biostatistics division. Images from retinal cameras are uploaded to the system, which gives an analysis of the patient's blood vessel patterns and whether there is any narrowing or obstruction. Doctors can then warn patients of the possible risk and recommend medication or lifestyle changes, such as quitting smoking. The main method available now for stroke risk detection is the MRI scan, but low capacity and high cost limit its use. Past researchers' efforts to use retinal images for the purpose are recorded in medical literature. But Zee said the biggest difficulty was that it takes a long time to make out blood vessel properties by looking at the images. He said the new system was quicker and required less manpower. It can also diagnose diabetic retinopathy, a complication among diabetes patients. Zee said the team was working on applying the system to detect the risk of other diseases including Alzheimer's, diabetes and age-related macular degeneration, a vision problem common in the elderly. The researchers have completed a study on 244 patients aged 50 to 70, of whom half have had a stroke and half have not. It found that the system identifies those who have had a stroke with 90 per cent accuracy. It missed the other 10 per cent mainly because they did not show common retinal blood vessel characteristics. The researchers are now recruiting 1,200 more patients over 65 who have no stroke history to be tested with the system. The results will be compared with their MRI scan results to further check the system's accuracy. The World Stroke Organisation estimates one in six people worldwide will have a stroke. In Hong Kong, about 18,000 people suffer first or recurrent strokes each year and 20 per cent of them die.
Stroke is the fourth leading cause of death in Hong Kong. Diabetic retinopathies (DR) and hypertensive retinopathies are associated with stroke. Retinal vessels are the only visible vessels and accessible by retinal imaging technique. They have the same embryo origin, histological structure and pathological change caused by diabetes and hypertension with cerebral vessels, which provide us a convenient way to assess cerebral vessels condition. Prof. Benny Zee and his research team from the Division of Biostatistics, The Jockey Club School of Public Health and Primary Care at The Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) have developed an automatic retinal image analysis system to assess cerebral vessel condition to evaluate the risk of stroke.
In order to study stroke using retinal images, it is logical to study DR first and expand the methodology further to cover new information for stroke. DR is the damage to the retina caused by complications of diabetes mellitus, which can lead to blindness. It is an ocular manifestation of systemic disease which affects up to 80% of all patients who had diabetes for 10 years or more. According to the guideline of American Academy of Ophthalmology, diabetes patients are supposed to be screened for DR at least once a year for mild DR and at least twice for more severe DR for prevention or treatment. However, there are problems with current manual screening process, such as variability between different observers, difficulty in outpatient clinics on image interpretation, etc.
Standard retinal images can be transmitted through internet to server installed with the computer algorithm using advance biostatistics method to read pixel-by-pixel in the retinal images and analyzed these pixels to come up with measurements on exudates, hemorrhages, new vessels and finally the overall rating of retinopathy. The method will decrease bias due to human perceptions, reduce cost and save time. We have tested the automated method by using a sample of 400 diabetes cases, where there were 249 DR patients and 151 were controls. The research team has correctly detected 233 DR cases and 134 cases without DR; the accuracy was 94% and 89% respectively.
With this technology, the CUHK research team has expanded the application for stroke detection and determined important retinal vessels characteristics specifically for stroke. The researchers have completed a case-control study with a sample size of 244 patients, (156 male, 88 female, mean age 65 years old). Among them 122 patients had stroke (81 with diabetes and 41 without diabetes) and 122 were controls (81 with diabetes and 41 without diabetes). In the study, they have correctly identified 110 stroke cases and 104 cases that had no stroke; the accuracy was 90% and 85% respectively.
In conclusion, the automatic retinal image analysis system developed by CUHK has a very high accuracy for DR. The technology is now being expanded to detect stroke for both diabetes patients and non-diabetic individuals.
Associate Director (Graduate Studies), JC School of Public Health and Primary Care Head, Division of Biostatistics. Director, Centre for Clinical Trials; Assistant Dean (Research), Faculty of Medicine and Professor Reference Link