Unlocking the Diagnostic Potential of ECG through Knowledge Transfer from Cardiac MRI

The electrocardiogram (ECG) is a widely available diagnostic tool that allows for a cost-effective and fast assessment of the cardiovascular health. However, more detailed examination with expensive cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging is often preferred for the diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases. While providing detailed visualization of the cardiac anatomy, CMR imaging is not widely available due to long scan times and high costs. To address this issue, we propose the first self-supervised contrastive approach that transfers domain-specific information from CMR images to ECG embeddings. Our approach combines multimodal contrastive learning with masked data modeling to enable holistic cardiac screening solely from ECG data. In extensive experiments using data from 40,044 UK Biobank subjects, we demonstrate the utility and generalizability of our method. We predict the subject-specific risk of various cardiovascular diseases and determine distinct cardiac phenotypes solely from ECG data. In a qualitative analysis, we demonstrate that our learned ECG embeddings incorporate information from CMR image regions of interest. We make our entire pipeline publicly available, including the source code and pre-trained model weights.

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