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Predicting left ventricular contractile function via Gaussian process emulation in aortic-banded rats

Stefano Longobardi, Alexandre Lewalle, Sam Coveney, Ivar Sjaastad, Emil Knut Stenersen Espe, William E. Louch, Cynthia J. Musante, Ahmad Sher, Steven Niederer

2020Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A Mathematical Physical and Engineering Sciences59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Cardiac contraction is the result of integrated cellular, tissue and organ function. Biophysical in silico cardiac models offer a systematic approach for studying these multi-scale interactions. The computational cost of such models is high, due to their multi-parametric and nonlinear nature. This has so far made it difficult to perform model fitting and prevented global sensitivity analysis (GSA) studies. We propose a machine learning approach based on Gaussian process emulation of model simulations using probabilistic surrogate models, which enables model parameter inference via a Bayesian history matching (HM) technique and GSA on whole-organ mechanics. This framework is applied to model healthy and aortic-banded hypertensive rats, a commonly used animal model of heart failure disease. The obtained probabilistic surrogate models accurately predicted the left ventricular pump function ( R 2 = 0.92 for ejection fraction). The HM technique allowed us to fit both the control and diseased virtual bi-ventricular rat heart models to magnetic resonance imaging and literature data, with model outputs from the constrained parameter space falling within 2 SD of the respective experimental values. The GSA identified Troponin C and cross-bridge kinetics as key parameters in determining both systolic and diastolic ventricular function. This article is part of the theme issue ‘Uncertainty quantification in cardiac and cardiovascular modelling and simulation’.

Topics & Concepts

EmulationCardiologyInternal medicineVentricular functionGaussian processProcess (computing)MedicineGaussianComputer scienceChemistryPsychologyComputational chemistrySocial psychologyOperating systemCardiac electrophysiology and arrhythmias