Extraction of Retinal Layers Through Convolution Neural Network (CNN) in an OCT Image for Glaucoma Diagnosis.

2020 
Glaucoma is a progressive and deteriorating optic neuropathy that leads to visual field defects. The damage occurs as glaucoma is irreversible, so early and timely diagnosis is of significant importance. The proposed system employs the convolution neural network (CNN) for automatic segmentation of the retinal layers. The inner limiting membrane (ILM) and retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE) are used to calculate cup-to-disc ratio (CDR) for glaucoma diagnosis. The proposed system uses structure tensors to extract candidate layer pixels, and a patch across each candidate layer pixel is extracted, which is classified using CNN. The proposed framework is based upon VGG-16 architecture for feature extraction and classification of retinal layer pixels. The output feature map is merged into SoftMax layer for classification and produces probability map for central pixel of each patch and decides whether it is ILM, RPE, or background pixels. Graph search theory refines the extracted layers by interpolating the missing points, and these extracted ILM and RPE are finally used to compute CDR value and diagnose glaucoma. The proposed system is validated using a local dataset of optical coherence tomography images from 196 patients, including normal and glaucoma subjects. The dataset contains manually annotated ILM and RPE layers; manually extracted patches for ILM, RPE, and background pixels; CDR values; and eventually final finding related to glaucoma. The proposed system is able to extract ILM and RPE with a small absolute mean error of 6.03 and 5.56, respectively, and it finds CDR value within average range of ± 0.09 as compared with glaucoma expert. The proposed system achieves average sensitivity, specificity, and accuracies of 94.6, 94.07, and 94.68, respectively.
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