A Fully Automated Pipeline for Normative Atrophy in Patients with Neurodegenerative Disease

Rummel, Christian; Aschwanden, Fabian; McKinley, Richard; Wagner, Franca; Salmen, Anke; Chan, Andrew; Wiest, Roland (2018). A Fully Automated Pipeline for Normative Atrophy in Patients with Neurodegenerative Disease. Frontiers in neurology, 8, p. 727. Frontiers Media S.A. 10.3389/fneur.2017.00727

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Introduction: Volumetric image analysis to detect progressive brain tissue loss in patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) has recently been suggested as a promising marker for “no evidence of disease activity.” Software packages for longitudinal whole-brain volume analysis in individual patients are already in clinical use; however, most of these methods have omitted region-based analysis. Here, we suggest a fully automatic analysis pipeline based on the free software packages FSL and FreeSurfer.

Materials and methods: Fifty-five T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) datasets of five patients with confirmed relapsing–remitting MS and mild to moderate disability were longitudinally analyzed compared to a morphometric reference database of 323 healthy controls (HCs). After lesion filling, the volumes of brain segmentations and morphometric parameters of cortical parcellations were automatically screened for global and regional abnormalities. Error margins and artifact probabilities of regional morphometric parameters were estimated. Linear models were fitted to the series of follow-up MRIs and checked for consistency with cross-sectional aging in HCs.

Results: As compared to leave-one-out cross-validation in a subset of the control dataset, anomaly detection rates were highly elevated in MRIs of two patients. We detected progressive volume changes that were stronger than expected compared to normal aging in 4/5 patients. In individual patients, we also identified stronger than expected regional decreases of subcortical gray matter, of cortical thickness, and areas of reducing gray–white contrast over time.

Conclusion: Statistical comparison with a large normative database may provide complementary and rater independent quantitative information about regional morphological changes related to disease progression or drug-related disease modification in individual patients. Regional volume loss may also be detected in clinically stable patients.

Item Type:

Journal Article (Original Article)

Division/Institute:

04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Radiology, Neuroradiology and Nuclear Medicine (DRNN) > Institute of Diagnostic and Interventional Neuroradiology
04 Faculty of Medicine > Department of Head Organs and Neurology (DKNS) > Clinic of Neurology

UniBE Contributor:

Rummel, Christian, McKinley, Richard, Wagner, Franca, Salmen, Anke, Chan, Andrew Hao-Kuang, Wiest, Roland Gerhard Rudi

Subjects:

600 Technology > 610 Medicine & health

ISSN:

1664-2295

Publisher:

Frontiers Media S.A.

Language:

English

Submitter:

Stefanie Hetzenecker

Date Deposited:

19 Mar 2018 12:58

Last Modified:

02 Mar 2023 23:30

Publisher DOI:

10.3389/fneur.2017.00727

PubMed ID:

29416523

BORIS DOI:

10.7892/boris.110589

URI:

https://boris.unibe.ch/id/eprint/110589

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