TY - JOUR T1 - Quality assessment of colour fundus and fluorescein angiography images using deep learning JF - British Journal of Ophthalmology JO - Br J Ophthalmol DO - 10.1136/bjo-2022-321963 SP - bjophthalmol-2022-321963 AU - Michael König AU - Philipp Seeböck AU - Bianca S Gerendas AU - Georgios Mylonas AU - Rudolf Winklhofer AU - Ioanna Dimakopoulou AU - Ursula Margarethe Schmidt-Erfurth Y1 - 2022/11/23 UR - http://bjo.bmj.com/content/early/2022/11/23/bjo-2022-321963.abstract N2 - Background/aims Image quality assessment (IQA) is crucial for both reading centres in clinical studies and routine practice, as only adequate quality allows clinicians to correctly identify diseases and treat patients accordingly. Here we aim to develop a neural network for automated real-time IQA in colour fundus (CF) and fluorescein angiography (FA) images.Methods Training and evaluation of two neural networks were conducted using 2272 CF and 2492 FA images, with binary labels in four (contrast, focus, illumination, shadow and reflection) and three (contrast, focus, noise) modality specific categories plus an overall quality ranking. Performance was compared with a second human grader, evaluated on an external public dataset and in a clinical trial use-case.Results The networks achieved a F1-score/area under the receiving operator characteristic/precision recall curve of 0.907/0.963/0.966 for CF and 0.822/0.918/0.889 for FA in overall quality prediction with similar results in most categories. A clear relation between model uncertainty and prediction error was observed. In the clinical trial use-case evaluation, the networks achieved an accuracy of 0.930 for CF and 0.895 for FA.Conclusion The presented method allows automated IQA in real time, demonstrating human-level performance for CF as well as FA. Such models can help to overcome the problem of human intergrader and intragrader variability by providing objective and reproducible IQA results. It has particular relevance for real-time feedback in multicentre clinical studies, when images are uploaded to central reading centre portals. Moreover, automated IQA as preprocessing step can support integrating automated approaches into clinical practice.Data are available upon reasonable request. Unfortunately, due to privacy restrictions, the image dataset can not be made publicly available. However, access to the data may be shared upon reasonable request. ER -