A Clearer Map for a Complex Problem
Imagine trying to find your way through a city with no street names or consistent landmarks. That’s what studying irregular heart rhythms can feel like for doctors. The heart’s upper chambers, called the atria, are complex and vary from person to person. This makes it hard to compare scans or share data between hospitals.
Now, a new open-source software called DIVAID is changing that. It automatically divides the atria into 15 standard regions, creating a consistent map that works across different types of heart scans and medical centers.
Irregular heart rhythms, like atrial fibrillation (AFib), affect millions of people worldwide. They can lead to stroke, heart failure, and other serious problems. To treat AFib effectively, doctors need to understand exactly where in the atria the problem starts.
But here’s the challenge: every heart looks a little different. One patient’s atria might be larger or shaped differently than another’s. This makes it tough to compare images or share findings between hospitals. Without a standard map, research can be inconsistent, and treatments may not be personalized.
This is where DIVAID comes in. By creating a consistent regional map, it helps doctors and researchers analyze heart scans in a more uniform way.
The Old Way vs. The New Way
Traditionally, experts manually draw regions on heart scans. This process is time-consuming and can vary between doctors. One expert might divide the atria slightly differently than another, leading to inconsistencies.
But here’s the twist: DIVAID does this automatically. It uses a computer algorithm to divide the atria into 15 standard regions, based on a model from the European Heart Rhythm Association (EHRA) and the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI).
What’s different this time? DIVAID is open-source, meaning anyone can use it for free. It also works across different types of heart scans, including CT, MRI, and 3D ultrasound.
How It Works: A Simple Analogy
Think of the atria as a house with 15 rooms. DIVAID acts like a smart floor plan designer. It automatically divides the house into 15 standard rooms, no matter how the house is built or what tools you use to measure it.
The software uses a computer algorithm to identify key landmarks in the atria, such as the openings where veins enter. It then divides the atria into 15 regions based on these landmarks. This ensures that every heart scan is analyzed the same way, whether it’s from a small clinic or a large research hospital.
Researchers tested DIVAID on 140 heart scans from multiple medical centers. The scans came from different imaging machines, including CT, MRI, and 3D ultrasound. They compared DIVAID’s results to manual drawings made by heart imaging experts.
DIVAID performed as well as—or better than—human experts. For the left atrium, the software matched expert drawings with 98% accuracy. For the right atrium, it was 90% accurate, which was slightly better than the agreement between two human experts.
The software also correctly identified the openings of major veins in 81% of cases and all the openings between the atria and ventricles in 100% of cases.
But here’s the catch: DIVAID was much faster than humans. While experts might take hours to manually draw regions, DIVAID does it in seconds.
The Surprising Shift
What’s really interesting is that DIVAID was more consistent than human experts. When two experts drew the same scan, their results varied slightly. But DIVAID gave the same result every time for the same scan.
This consistency is crucial for research. It means that data from different hospitals can be combined more easily, leading to larger studies and more reliable findings.
Where This Fits In
This tool doesn’t replace doctors. Instead, it supports them by providing a consistent starting point for analysis. It’s especially useful for research, where large datasets need to be compared across different centers.
This doesn’t mean this treatment is available yet.
If you have an irregular heart rhythm, this tool won’t change your treatment today. But it could lead to better research and more personalized treatments in the future. If you’re participating in a clinical trial, your heart scans might be analyzed using this software.
Talk to your doctor if you have questions about how your heart scans are being used in research.
The study was small, with only 140 scans tested. The software also needs to be tested in real-world clinical settings before it can be widely adopted. Additionally, DIVAID is designed for research, not for diagnosing individual patients.
Researchers plan to test DIVAID in larger studies and in real clinical settings. If it continues to perform well, it could become a standard tool for analyzing heart scans. This could lead to more consistent research and better treatments for irregular heart rhythms.
The software is already available for free online, so researchers can start using it right away.