Predicting Keratoconus Progression and Need for Corneal Crosslinking Using Deep Learning

J Clin Med. 2021 Feb 18;10(4):844. doi: 10.3390/jcm10040844.

Abstract

We aimed to predict keratoconus progression and the need for corneal crosslinking (CXL) using deep learning (DL). Two hundred and seventy-four corneal tomography images taken by Pentacam HR® (Oculus, Wetzlar, Germany) of 158 keratoconus patients were examined. All patients were examined two times or more, and divided into two groups; the progression group and the non-progression group. An axial map of the frontal corneal plane, a pachymetry map, and a combination of these two maps at the initial examination were assessed according to the patients' age. Training with a convolutional neural network on these learning data objects was conducted. Ninety eyes showed progression and 184 eyes showed no progression. The axial map, the pachymetry map, and their combination combined with patients' age showed mean AUC values of 0.783, 0.784, and 0.814 (95% confidence interval (0.721-0.845) (0.722-0.846), and (0.755-0.872), respectively), with sensitivities of 87.8%, 77.8%, and 77.8% ((79.2-93.7), (67.8-85.9), and (67.8-85.9)) and specificities of 59.8%, 65.8%, and 69.6% ((52.3-66.9), (58.4-72.6), and (62.4-76.1)), respectively. Using the proposed DL neural network model, keratoconus progression can be predicted on corneal tomography maps combined with patients' age.

Keywords: corneal crosslinking; deep learning; keratoconus; patients’ age; prediction; progression; tomography.