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Enhancing fetal alcohol spectrum disorders diagnosis with a classifier based on the intracerebellar gradient of volumetric undersizing.
- Source :
-
Human brain mapping [Hum Brain Mapp] 2023 Aug 01; Vol. 44 (11), pp. 4321-4336. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 May 20. - Publication Year :
- 2023
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Abstract
- In fetal alcohol spectrum disorders (FASD), brain growth deficiency is a hallmark of subjects both with fetal alcohol syndrome (FAS) and with non-syndromic FASD (NS-FASD, i.e., those without specific diagnostic features). However, although the cerebellum was suggested to be more severely undersized than the rest of the brain, it has not yet been given a specific place in the FASD diagnostic criteria where neuroanatomical features still count for little if anything in diagnostic specificity. We applied a combination of cerebellar segmentation tools on a 1.5 T 3DT1 brain MRI dataset from a monocentric population of 89 FASD (52 FAS, 37 NS-FASD) and 126 typically developing controls (6-20 years old), providing 8 volumes: cerebellum, vermis and 3 lobes (anterior, posterior, inferior), plus total brain volume. After adjustment of confounders, the allometric scaling relationship between these cerebellar volumes (V <subscript>i</subscript> ) and the total brain or cerebellum volume (V <subscript>t</subscript> ) was fitted (V <subscript>i</subscript> = bV <subscript>t</subscript> <superscript>a</superscript> ), and the effect of group (FAS, control) on allometric scaling was evaluated. We then estimated for each cerebellar volume in the FAS population the deviation from the typical scaling ( <subscript>v</subscript> DTS) learned in the controls. Lastly, we trained and tested two classifiers to discriminate FAS from controls, one based on the total cerebellum <subscript>v</subscript> DTS only, the other based on all the cerebellar <subscript>v</subscript> DTS, comparing their performance both in the FAS and the NS-FASD group. Allometric scaling was significantly different between FAS and control group for all the cerebellar volumes (p < .001). We confirmed the excess of total cerebellum volume deficit ( <subscript>v</subscript> DTS = -10.6%) and revealed an antero-inferior-posterior gradient of volumetric undersizing in the hemispheres (-12.4%, 1.1%, 2.0%, respectively) and the vermis (-16.7%, -9.2%, -8.6%, repectively). The classifier based on the intracerebellar gradient of <subscript>v</subscript> DTS performed more efficiently than the one based on total cerebellum <subscript>v</subscript> DTS only (AUC = 92% vs. 82%, p = .001). Setting a high probability threshold for >95% specificity of the classifiers, the gradient-based classifier identified 35% of the NS-FASD to have a FAS cerebellar phenotype, compared to 11% with the cerebellum-only classifier (p <subscript>FISHER</subscript> = 0.027). In a large series of FASD, this study details the volumetric undersizing within the cerebellum at the lobar and vermian level using allometric scaling, revealing an anterior-inferior-posterior gradient of vulnerability to prenatal alcohol exposure. It also strongly suggests that this intracerebellar gradient of volumetric undersizing may be a reliable neuroanatomical signature of FAS that could be used to improve the specificity of the diagnosis of NS-FASD.<br /> (© 2023 The Authors. Human Brain Mapping published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 1097-0193
- Volume :
- 44
- Issue :
- 11
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- Human brain mapping
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 37209313
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26348