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1.IntroductionTwo-dimensional (2-D) color retinal fundus images not only provide information about different eye conditions and ophthalmic diseases (e.g., myopia, macular degeneration and glaucoma), but they could also show signs of systemic diseases such as diabetes.1–4 The optic disc (OD) is one of the fundamental features of interest. The OD is located anatomically at the distal end of optic nerve (Fig. 1) and appears as a bright yellowish-white ellipse partially overshadowed by retinal blood vessels in the fundus image. Segmenting the OD is not a trivial task, owing to light artefacts, blood vessels, and often ill-defined boundaries, particularly in the presence of parapapillary atrophy (PPA). Clinically, PPA can be categorized into alpha- and beta-zone PPA.5 The -zone often refers to the outer zone of PPA covering irregular hyper- and hypo-pigmented areas in the retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), either on their own or in the surrounding -zone; the -zone is usually the zone of complete RPE atrophy, next to the OD. However, such division will not be made in this work. The detection and quantification of PPA will be based on the outermost boundaries of single or both zones of PPA. The reason PPA develops has remained unclear, but PPA has been linked to degenerative myopia6 and glaucoma,7 both of which can lead to sight loss. Early detection and monitoring of PPA could therefore offer a way to monitor degeneration in retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) and degenerative myopia. PPA appears as an irregular shape (e.g., scleral crescents, temporal choroidal, or a ring around the periphery of the OD) and is of similar brightness to the OD, although -zone PPA may appear slightly brighter than the OD region while the -zone appears darker. Figure 2 shows an example. The literature surrounding OD detection and segmentation is rich, as the OD is an important parameter in glaucoma diagnosis8,9 and a common landmark when locating regions of interest such as the macula.10,11 The detection and segmentation of the OD region has been performed using 2-D fundus images directly12–14 and through three-dimensional (3-D) planimetric images generated from multimodal imaging systems.15,16 The detection methods have searched for either a large cluster of bright pixels17 or a region with the highest variation in grey level intensity.18 However, such methods are susceptible to retinal lesions (e.g., exudates), which can also appear bright in fundus images and artefacts (e.g., intensity gradient across the image). An alternative method based on watershed transformation and morphological filtering has been proposed,19 but obstructions such as retinal vessels are difficult to remove completely without introducing significant distortion and loss to the fundus image. Techniques based on vascular models have proved more robust, at the expense of higher computational complexity.12 They have decomposed fundus images at multiple resolutions and used Hausdorff-based template matching techniques to detect the OD. More recently, a combination of level set and Chan-Vese (CV) methods has been explored,20 as CV has the potential to auto-compensate discontinuities in the OD boundary. However, this approach suffers from major drawbacks, e.g., the segmentation process is likely to be time-consuming, CV requires an accurate initial “guess” of the OD boundary, and it is likely to achieve good results only when the OD region is of homogenous intensity. Applying a circular Hough transform on the Prewitt edge map on the dual channel (red and green) of images would prove a faster approach.21 This method achieves a mean accuracy level of 86%. However, the inhomogeneity in the OD region would lead to a noisy edge map and hence incorrect results from the Hough transform.21 Besides, several other OD segmentation approaches have also been reported. These approaches are based on graph search,22 an adaptive method using mathematical morphology,23 a active contour model,24 or blood vessel information with graph construction.25 In addition, feasibility studies using 3-D multimodal imaging systems also exist.10,26 These systems are not yet widely available, and the required image processing time is likely to be as demanding as that required by the CV method. Stereo imaging techniques have also been exploited using a “Snake” algorithm, together with -tile thresholding on an edge map, to outline the OD boundary.27 However, the presence of PPA remains a problem. One possible solution is to predetermine the presence of PPA and subsequently devise a corresponding strategy to segment the OD region. Despite its importance as a potential biomarker for sight loss, very little has been done to develop tools to detect and segment PPA using 2-D fundus images. One early system has been developed (PAMELA) which can detect certain types of PPA automatically.6,28 However, the system cannot quantify the extent and hence describe the development of PPA. PAMELA uses texture analysis to extract PPA features and applies an artificial neural network known as a Support Vector Machine to perform binary classification (i.e., PPA present or not). Because the PPA has similar attributes to the OD in terms of contrast and brightness, segregating one from another accurately is nontrivial. Current ophthalmic imaging techniques available for the examination of both the OD and the PPA regions are Heidelberg retina tomography (HRT), optical coherence tomography (OCT), and the more recent ultra-high resolution (UHR) OCT, which offers a pseudo-color 3-D visualisation of the aforementioned regions.29 These techniques have provided some success, but they still have four main limitations.30 First, these techniques are not widely used in ophthalmology clinics, because they operate with more expensive and specialized lasers.31,32 Second, a technician or photographer needs an intimate understanding of retinal anatomy to identify the OD boundary manually before the PPA and OD variable can be estimated from the image contour based on third dimensional depth information.32,33 Third, the patient is required to remain motionless for quite a long time during the scanning procedure executed by OCT. Any eye movement would produce artefacts in images. Fourth, these techniques are limited as an aid for monitoring disease progression. The existing software for OCT does not allow users to retrieve and display images acquired from previous examinations to compare them with a new image. Moreover, there is a lack of automated software for large-scale screening programs.32 This paper aims to address the technical challenges and presents an integrated solution (PANDORA: Parapapillary atrophy AND Optic disc Region Assessment) that both detects the presence of PPA and quantifies the OD and PPA regions using 2-D color fundus images. We exploit both the red and blue channels in the RGB space to maximize feature extraction (OD/PPA) while minimizing the interference caused by blood vessels. PANDORA has been designed to be fully automated, to allow large population studies in the future and to reduce problems associated with human errors (e.g., habituation and fatigue). 2.MethodologyAll the color fundus images for the assessment of PANDORA were randomly drawn from the database of the Lothian Birth Cohort (LBC) 1936 study.34 The LBC study included the surviving members of the 1947 Scottish Mental Survey (,805) who were born in 1936 and currently reside in the Edinburgh area (Lothian) of Scotland. Three hundred and twelve individuals were tracked successfully and had their retinal photos taken at the Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Facility, Western General Hospital, NHS Lothian, Scotland. This research complied with the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the Lothian (Scotland A) Research Ethics Committee. Our imaging tool, PANDORA, is implemented in MATLAB (Mathworks Inc., Natick, MA, USA). All fundus images were first cropped manually to the region of interest (ROI) and had a “ground truth” estimate of the OD and PPA regions defined by an ophthalmologist (author AL), who had not seen the results from PANDORA. Figure 3 shows an example of the ROI selection on a left eye fundus image. Figure 4 illustrates the flow chart of the PANDORA algorithm, which can be divided into three phases. The OD segmentation module uses an ellipse fitting technique on a (Sobel) edge map in the red channel to outline the OD boundary. With the OD removed, the PPA detection module then determines the presence of PPA in the temporal zone using prior knowledge about the nature of PPA. Note that the temporal zone is one of the four zones in the fundus image (see Fig. 5), in which PPA normally first develops. Once the PPA region is detected, we then conduct PPA segmentation using a combination of image processing techniques: thresholding, a scanning filter, and multiseed region growing methods.20 2.1.Phase 1: OD SegmentationThe OD is extracted using a direct least square fitting algorithm of an ellipse (DLSFE).35 This algorithm yields an elliptical solution that minimizes the sum of squared algebraic distances from the image edge points to the fitted ellipse. However, this ellipse fitting technique is susceptible to noise and requires preprocessing to remove unwanted pixels from the fundus image before fitting. First of all, a Sobel edge detector is applied to the red channel of the cropped image, generating an edge map. The Sobel operator was chosen for two reasons: (a) it could compute the gradient of image intensity and describe the smoothness of an edge (abrupt or gradual), hence providing a more reliable result (random noise would appear as abrupt edges); and (b) with a large convolution kernel, it could also act as a noise-filtering function. Once an edge map is produced, a two-stage preprocessing technique is used to eliminate noise. The first stage removes the retinal vessels originating from the OD region, as they may interfere with the accurate segmentation of the OD area. The detection of retinal vessels is achieved by applying the thresholding technique in hue channel of the images. The second stage isolates the OD (and the PPA) from the background by using a clustering technique with the nearest neighbor rule36 in the L*a*b* color space. To achieve that, samples of the ROI region and the background are first extracted in L*a*b* color space and then used as markers to classify each pixel (as the ROI or the background) by using the nearest neighbor rule. Upon completion, a DLSFE is fitted to estimate the OD boundary. To reduce fitting errors, we fit the OD region iteratively until the center of the fitting result is within a predetermined “tolerance” distance, which is 1/35th of the image width (in pixels), from the center of the cropped image (ROI). 2.2.Phase 2: PPA DetectionThe OD is clinically divided into four zones: temporal, superior, nasal, and inferior. Figure 5 shows an example of a right eye image. The temporal and nasal zones must be exchanged if the image is from a left eye. The type of image (right or left eye) was prelabeled on each file name during the image recording. As previously mentioned, the OD and PPA account for the brighter region of the image (the threshold is set empirically at the top 12% of the histogram of the image intensity). If the OD region (estimated from Phase 1) is removed, we can detect PPA by the presence of any remaining bright pixels in the temporal zone, as shown in Fig. 5(c) and 5(h). This phase of operation is carried out in the blue channel, where the PPA appears most clearly. 2.3.Phase 3: PPA SegmentationWe previously developed an automated scheme for the extraction and quantification of the PPA region.20 This scheme used an initial segmentation and estimation of the OD-plus-PPA boundary based on a modified Chan-Vase analysis37 of the blue channel. The OD region is then removed from the OD-plus-PPA using the result obtained from Phase 1, leaving the first order estimation of the PPA region. The actual PPA boundary is subsequently refined by using a multiseed region growing method. 20 PANDORA combines these techniques and exploits both global and local information for PPA and OD segmentation. As before, it could derive the following three physiological parameters (all in pixel): PANDORA uses a different approach to extract the OD, so it does not require any additional calibration to compensate for the underestimation (due to premature termination of snake evolution), as in our previous tool.14,20 In addition, PANDORA offers a new feature: it could reveal the shape of PPA, which may be important in understanding the development process of PPA. 3.ResultsA total of 133 color fundus images (including 31 poor-quality images as determined by an ophthalmologist, author AL) from 101 subjects were randomly selected from the LBC database. Without knowing the results from PANDORA, the human assessor identified images with PPA (82 images with PPA; 51 images without PPA) and provided a “ground truth” estimate of the OD and PPA region in each image. The assessor first observed in full color space (RGB) the scleral ring and the retinal vessel bending to identify the boundary of the OD. Subsequently, the region of PPA was identified based on the brightness and texture of image pixels. In this work, we do not divide the PPA region into different zones but view them as one. We further randomly drew a subsample of 30 images with PPA and 20 images without PPA to evaluate the segmentation results from PANDORA. The area enclosed by the ground estimate/the segmentation result from PANDORA is counted pixel by pixel with the MATLAB software development tool to quantify the size of each region. PANDORA achieved a PPA detection rate of 89.47%. In this context, the detection rate refers to the probability of a correct test among all the 133 test images. Figures 6 and 7 show six samples from the OD segmentation results of fundus images without and with PPA, respectively. The first column shows examples of the best results achieved, while the second column shows the worst. The ground estimate is enclosed by black spots, and the OD segmentation result is enclosed by a blue solid line. Figure 8 shows six samples of the PPA segmentation results from PANDORA. The segmentation result is enclosed by red triangles, and the ground truth estimate is enclosed by a solid black line. The results indicate that PANDORA is able to detect and capture the boundary separating the OD and PPA regions reasonably well, despite its poorly defined nature. Apart from the variation in color, size, and shape of the OD and PPA, there are additional factors shown in Figs. 6 and 7 to take into account. The OD boundary and the blood vessels do not always have a sharp contrast, making it difficult to remove all the background noise before fitting an ellipse. The presence of PPA further complicates this process, as shown in Fig. 7(b), 7(d), and 7(f). The examples given in Fig. 7(b) and 7(f) shows overestimates of the OD region. This, in effect, reduces the possible PPA area, which is shown in Fig. 8(b) and 8(f). Conversely, underestimation of the OD region could also lead to inaccurate segmentation of the PPA region, as shown in Fig. 8(c) to 8(e). Therefore, the use of the multiseed region growing method in Phase 3 to refine the PPA boundary is necessary to eliminate any contribution from the OD, as Fig. 8(c) illustrates. 4.Validity of the ToolThere are two main functions of PANDORA: to determine the presence of PPA and to quantify the area of PPA and OD. We therefore adopted two different validation methods. First, we calculated PANDORA’s PPA detection rate as well as its specificity and sensitivity. The specificity, defined as the number of true negatives (TN) divided by the sum of TN and false positives (FP), indicates how well a tool can correctly identify negatives. The sensitivity, defined as the number of true positives (TP) divided by the sum of TP and false negatives (FN), indicates how well a tool can identify actual positives. Based on the PPA detection results, PANDORA is able to achieve a sensitivity of 0.83 and a specificity of 1. Second, in terms of area estimation, the accuracy is measured by comparing the segmentation results against the ophthalmologist’s ground truth estimate of the OD/PPA region. PANDORA is assessed by a simple yet effective overlap measure () of the matching between two estimates, which is defined as: where and represent the segmentation result and the ground estimate, respectively, and (.) is the number of pixels within the targeted region. The accuracy in defining a region means the percentage of the overlap measure (i.e., ). Table 1 summarizes the segmentation results on 50 images. In Table 1, mean accuracy refers to the average value of the accuracy in defining a region for a set of test images ( for images with PPA and for images without PPA).Table 1The statistical results of PPA and OD segmentation in 50 trials.
5.DiscussionThis paper introduces PANDORA, a novel automated retinal imaging tool for both detecting the presence of PPA and quantifying OD and PPA using 2-D color fundus images. Experimental results showed that PANDORA achieves a high PPA detection rate (89.47%), despite the wide variation in fundus image quality. These results are comparable with those reported by Liu et al.,28 in which the detection rate is 87.5%, the sensitivity is 0.85, and the specificity is 0.9 of the database (40 images with PPA; 40 images without PPA) from the Singapore Eye Research Institute (SERI). Figure 9 shows the segmentation results of the OD and PPA regions for images with and without PPA. As expected, the results indicate that PANDORA segments the OD better in images without PPA than in those with PPA, as the OD is the sole bright object. The OD region may be overestimated or underestimated when there is no clear boundary, as is often the case in images with PPA. In addition, the mean accuracy of OD segmentation in images with and without PPA of the proposed method in 50 trials are 81.31 () and 95.32% (), respectively. These results are comparable to the best state-of-the-art performance as listed in Table 2. It should be mentioned that Gradient Vector Flow (GVF) Snake38 and our previous method20 have a much lower OD segmentation accuracy in the images with PPA (e.g., 48.65% and 68.35%, respectively), because they face a convergence problem whenever the boundary of a region is not clear (in this case, PPA region). Table 2Comparison of the OD segmentation methods in 50 trials.
PANDORA has three primary advantages over alternative approaches. First, it both detects the presence of PPA and allows quantification of the PPA region automatically from 2-D color fundus images alone. Previous studies6,28 were limited to the detection of PPA. Conventionally, the size of the PPA region is quantified manually.2,39 PANDORA therefore provides the first automated tool to allow PPA development to be tracked. Second, PANDORA improves upon our previous tool14,20 by using an OD segmentation approach based on an edge map, which estimates the OD/PPA boundary more accurately. Therefore, it can describe the actual shape of the regions, allowing more detailed study of the relationship between PPA and different ocular diseases. The previous approach, which was based on the ‘snake’ algorithm, suffered from a random offset in defining the boundary and could give only an estimate of the size. Third, PANDORA has been fully automated, reducing the dependency on a human assessor and minimizing problems related to human errors such as habituation. PANDORA’s physiological measurements offer additional information for clinicians studying ophthalmic or systemic diseases. Fourth, PANDORA is intrinsically more appropriate for large-scale screening programs owing to the utilization of a 2-D fundus camera as an alternative to the OCT equipment. A digital fundus camera40 could acquire fundus images quickly, without the time-consuming scanning procedure required by the OCT machine. It is also relatively cheap and has become a standard examination tool in ophthalmology clinics. Therefore, working on 2-D fundus images is both cost-effective and time-effective, and it is more convenient to the users as compared with OCT instruments. There remain some limitations within our method. Firstly, PANDORA is susceptible to noise, due to an ill-defined boundary, from overlapping blood vessels and from lighting artefacts. Creating a noise-free edge map for ellipse fitting is essential to avoid underestimation or overestimation of the actual region. In this work, we used a naïve thresholding technique to segment retinal blood vessels from the fundus images. Techniques such as an artificial neural network41–43 will be explored in future development to improve the robustness of retinal vessel segmentation. Second, the proposed method uses only the brightness of the pixels to detect the presence of PPA. Adding texture information, for instance, should improve the detection rate. Third, the OD is not always perfectly elliptical, despite its general appearance. The assumption made in this work (i.e., the OD is always elliptical or circular) helps to estimate the boundary of the OD, especially when it is poorly defined (i.e., it appears as broken lines in the edge map). Admittedly, this assumption could also limit the fit to the real OD size and shape, as in Fig. 6(d). While more complex segmentation algorithms might be able to describe a nonelliptical shape better, it will remain difficult to estimate a poorly defined boundary. As such, we argue that the principle of Occam’s razor may be best applied. 6.ConclusionsPPA has been linked to degenerative myopia and glaucoma, both of which can lead to loss of sight. Early detection and quantification offer an opportunity for medical intervention to halt or slow the development of ophthalmic diseases. However, existing methods are manual and subjective. They also require multimodal imaging systems (i.e., a 2-D standard laser ophthalmoscope plus an optical coherence tomograph) which are not widely available. In this paper, we demonstrate a tool that can detect PPA and quantify its size automatically using 2-D color fundus images alone. The presence of PPA is detected with an accuracy of 89.47% in the trial of 133 test images. The sensitivity of PPA detection is 0.83, and the specificity is 1. Our proposed tool also achieves an accuracy of 81.31% () and 95.32% () in estimating the OD region in images with and without PPA, respectively. The accuracy of PPA segmentation is 73.57% (), compared with the “gold standard” defined by an experienced ophthalmologist. Further development of PANDORA will allow a wider study of the development of PPA and its significance in disease diagnosis. ReferencesT. DammsF. Dannheim,
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