Usefulness of multi-labelling artificial intelligence in detecting rhythm disorders and acute ST-elevation myocardial infarction on 12-lead electrocardiogram

Eur Heart J Digit Health. 2021 Feb 26;2(2):299-310. doi: 10.1093/ehjdh/ztab029. eCollection 2021 Jun.

Abstract

Aims: To develop an artificial intelligence-based approach with multi-labelling capability to identify both ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) and 12 heart rhythms based on 12-lead electrocardiograms (ECGs).

Methods and results: We trained, validated, and tested a long short-term memory (LSTM) model for the multi-label diagnosis of 13 ECG patterns (STEMI + 12 rhythm classes) using 60 537 clinical ECGs from 35 981 patients recorded between 15 January 2009 and 31 December 2018. In addition to the internal test above, we conducted a real-world external test, comparing the LSTM model with board-certified physicians of different specialties using a separate dataset of 308 ECGs covering all 13 ECG diagnoses. In the internal test, the area under the curves (AUCs) of the LSTM model in classifying the 13 ECG patterns ranged between 0.939 and 0.999. For the external test, the LSTM model for multi-labelling of the 13 ECG patterns evaluated by AUC was 0.987 ± 0.021, which was superior to those of cardiologists (0.898 ± 0.113, P < 0.001), emergency physicians (0.820 ± 0.134, P < 0.001), internists (0.765 ± 0.155, P < 0.001), and a commercial algorithm (0.845 ± 0.121, P < 0.001). Of note, the LSTM model achieved an accuracy of 0.987, AUC of 0.997, and precision, recall, and F 1 score of 0.952, 0.870, and 0.909, respectively, in detecting STEMI.

Conclusions: We demonstrated the usefulness of an LSTM model in the multi-labelling detection of both rhythm classes and STEMI in competitive testing against board-certified physicians. This AI tool exceeding the cardiologist-level performance in detecting STEMI and rhythm classes on 12-lead ECG may be useful in prioritizing chest pain triage and expediting clinical decision-making in healthcare.

Keywords: Artificial intelligence (AI); ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI).