Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Lee Chonho
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code R000007901
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Clinical applicability of automated cephalometric landmark identification. Part I ‐ Patient‐related identification errors

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Chihiro Tanikawa
Chonho Lee
Jae‐yoen Lim
Ayaka Oka
Takashi Yamashiro

Summary

OBJECTIVES: To determine whether AI systems that recognize cephalometric landmarks can apply to various patient groups and to examine the patient-related factors associated with identification errors. SETTING AND SAMPLE POPULATION: The present retrospective cohort study analysed digital lateral cephalograms obtained from 1785 Japanese orthodontic patients. Patients were categorized into eight subgroups according to dental age, cleft lip and/or palate, orthodontic appliance use and overjet. MATERIALS AND METHODS: An AI system that automatically recognizes anatomic landmarks on lateral cephalograms was used. Thirty cephalograms in each subgroup were randomly selected and used to test the system's performance. The remaining cephalograms were used for system learning. The success rates in landmark recognition were evaluated using confidence ellipses with α = 0.99 for each landmark. The selection of test samples, learning of the system and evaluation of the system were repeated five times for each subgroup. The mean success rate and identification error were calculated. Factors associated with identification errors were examined using a multiple linear regression model. RESULTS: The success rate and error varied among subgroups, ranging from 85% to 91% and 1.32 mm to 1.50 mm, respectively. Cleft lip and/or palate was found to be a factor associated with greater identification errors, whereas dental age, orthodontic appliances and overjet were not significant factors (all, P < .05). CONCLUSION: Artificial intelligence systems that recognize cephalometric landmarks could be applied to various patient groups. Patient-oriented errors were found in patients with cleft lip and/or palate.

Magazine(name)

Orthodontics & Craniofacial Research

Publisher

Wiley

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Date of Issue

2021-05-22

Referee

Exist

Invited

 

Language

English

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.1111/ocr.12501

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PMID

 

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