Automated inflammatory bowel disease detection using wearable bowel sound event spotting

IntroductionInflammatory bowel disorders may result in abnormal Bowel Sound (BS) characteristics during auscultation. We employ pattern spotting to detect rare bowel BS events in continuous abdominal recordings using a smart T-shirt with embedded miniaturised microphones. Subsequently, we investigat...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Annalisa Baronetto, Sarah Fischer, Markus F. Neurath, Oliver Amft
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Digital Health
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fdgth.2025.1514757/full
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Summary:IntroductionInflammatory bowel disorders may result in abnormal Bowel Sound (BS) characteristics during auscultation. We employ pattern spotting to detect rare bowel BS events in continuous abdominal recordings using a smart T-shirt with embedded miniaturised microphones. Subsequently, we investigate the clinical relevance of BS spotting in a classification task to distinguish patients diagnosed with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) and healthy controls.MethodsAbdominal recordings were obtained from 24 patients with IBD with varying disease activity and 21 healthy controls across different digestive phases. In total, approximately 281 h of audio data were inspected by expert raters and thereof 136 h were manually annotated for BS events. A deep-learning-based audio pattern spotting algorithm was trained to retrieve BS events. Subsequently, features were extracted around detected BS events and a Gradient Boosting Classifier was trained to classify patients with IBD vs. healthy controls. We further explored classification window size, feature relevance, and the link between BS-based IBD classification performance and IBD activity.ResultsStratified group K-fold cross-validation experiments yielded a mean area under the receiver operating characteristic curve ≥0.83 regardless of whether BS were manually annotated or detected by the BS spotting algorithm.DiscussionAutomated BS retrieval and our BS event classification approach have the potential to support diagnosis and treatment of patients with IBD.
ISSN:2673-253X