Title :
Robust detection and classification of longitudinal changes in color retinal fundus images for monitoring diabetic retinopathy
Author :
Narasimha-Iyer, Harihar ; Can, Ali ; Roysam, Badrinath ; Stewart, Charles V. ; Tanenbaum, Howard L. ; Majerovics, Anna ; Singh, Hanumant
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Comput. & Syst. Eng., Rensselaer Polytech. Inst., Troy, NY, USA
fDate :
6/1/2006 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A fully automated approach is presented for robust detection and classification of changes in longitudinal time-series of color retinal fundus images of diabetic retinopathy. The method is robust to: 1) spatial variations in illumination resulting from instrument limitations and changes both within, and between patient visits; 2) imaging artifacts such as dust particles; 3) outliers in the training data; 4) segmentation and alignment errors. Robustness to illumination variation is achieved by a novel iterative algorithm to estimate the reflectance of the retina exploiting automatically extracted segmentations of the retinal vasculature, optic disk, fovea, and pathologies. Robustness to dust artifacts is achieved by exploiting their spectral characteristics, enabling application to film-based, as well as digital imaging systems. False changes from alignment errors are minimized by subpixel accuracy registration using a 12-parameter transformation that accounts for unknown retinal curvature and camera parameters. Bayesian detection and classification algorithms are used to generate a color-coded output that is readily inspected. A multiobserver validation on 43 image pairs from 22 eyes involving nonproliferative and proliferative diabetic retinopathies, showed a 97% change detection rate, a 3 % miss rate, and a 10% false alarm rate. The performance in correctly classifying the changes was 99.3%. A self-consistency metric, and an error factor were developed to measure performance over more than two periods. The average self consistency was 94% and the error factor was 0.06%. Although this study focuses on diabetic changes, the proposed techniques have broader applicability in ophthalmology.
Keywords :
Bayes methods; biomedical optical imaging; diseases; eye; image classification; image colour analysis; image segmentation; iterative methods; medical image processing; patient monitoring; time series; Bayesian detection; alignment errors; classification algorithm; color retinal fundus images; diabetic retinopathy monitoring; digital imaging systems; dust particles; film-based imaging systems; fovea; illumination; imaging artifacts; iterative algorithm; longitudinal time-series changes; ophthalmology; optic disc; outliers; reflectance; retinal vasculature; robust detection; segmentation errors; self-consistency metric; subpixel accuracy registration; Diabetes; Image segmentation; Instruments; Lighting; Optical imaging; Patient monitoring; Retina; Retinopathy; Robustness; Training data; Bayesian classification; change analysis; change detection; diabetic retinopathy; illumination correction; retinal image analysis; Algorithms; Artificial Intelligence; Color; Colorimetry; Diabetic Retinopathy; Fluorescein Angiography; Humans; Image Enhancement; Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted; Pattern Recognition, Automated; Reproducibility of Results; Retina; Sensitivity and Specificity;
Journal_Title :
Biomedical Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TBME.2005.863971