Robust Detection of Retinal Neovascularization in Widefield Optical Coherence Tomography
Jinyi Hao (1), Jie Wang (1), Liqin Gao (1), Tristan T. Hormel (1), Yukun Guo (1, 2), An-Lun Wu (1, 3), Christina J. Flaxel (1), Steven T. Bailey (1), Kotaro Tsuboi (4), Thomas S. Hwang (1), and Yali Jia (1, 2) ((1) Casey Eye Institute, Oregon Health & Science University

TL;DR
This paper introduces a deep learning method for detecting and staging retinal neovascularization in widefield OCTA images, achieving high accuracy and enabling longitudinal monitoring.
Contribution
The study presents a novel direct binary localization approach for RNV detection in widefield OCTA, outperforming traditional segmentation-dependent methods.
Findings
Achieved AUC of 0.96 to 0.99 for RNV diagnosis
Achieved IOU of 0.76 to 0.88 for segmentation
Demonstrated longitudinal monitoring of lesion growth
Abstract
Retinal neovascularization (RNV) is a vision threatening development in diabetic retinopathy (DR). Vision loss associated with RNV is preventable with timely intervention, making RNV clinical screening and monitoring a priority. Optical coherence tomography (OCT) angiography (OCTA) provides high-resolution imaging and high-sensitivity detection of RNV lesions. With recent commercial devices introducing widefield OCTA imaging to the clinic, the technology stands to improve early detection of RNV pathology. However, to meet clinical requirements these imaging capabilities must be combined with effective RNV detection and quantification, but existing algorithms for OCTA images are optimized for conventional, i.e. narrow, fields of view. Here, we present a novel approach for RNV diagnosis and staging on widefield OCT/OCTA. Unlike conventional methods dependent on multi-layer retinal…
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