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Reproducibility of hippocampal atrophy rates measured with manual, FreeSurfer, AdaBoost, FSL/FIRST and the MAPS-HBSI methods in Alzheimer's disease

Authors :
Hugo Vrenken
Paolo Bosco
Giovanni B. Frisoni
Baptiste Grenier
Frederik Barkhof
Adriaan Versteeg
Alberto Redolfi
Ronald A. van Schijndel
Peter J. Visser
Bob W. van Dijk
Jérôme Revillard
Remko A. de Jong
E. Mulder
Keith S. Cover
Soheil Damangir
David Manset
Kelvin K. Leung
Physics and medical technology
Amsterdam Neuroscience - Brain Imaging
Radiology and nuclear medicine
Source :
Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, 252, 26-35. Elsevier Ireland Ltd, Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, Vol. 252 (2016) pp. 26-35, Cover, K S, van Schijndel, R A, Versteeg, A, Leung, K K, Mulder, E R, Jong, R A, Visser, P J, Redolfi, A, Revillard, J, Grenier, B, Manset, D, Damangir, S, Bosco, P, Vrenken, H, van Dijk, B W, Frisoni, G B & Barkhof, F 2016, ' Reproducibility of hippocampal atrophy rates measured with manual, FreeSurfer, AdaBoost, FSL/FIRST and the MAPS-HBSI methods in Alzheimer's disease ', Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, vol. 252, pp. 26-35 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.2016.04.006
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2016.

Abstract

The purpose of this study is to assess the reproducibility of hippocampal atrophy rate measurements of commonly used fully-automated algorithms in Alzheimer disease (AD). The reproducibility of hippocampal atrophy rate for FSL/FIRST, AdaBoost, FreeSurfer, MAPS independently and MAPS combined with the boundary shift integral (MAPS-HBSI) were calculated. Back-to-back (BTB) 3D T1-weighted MPRAGE MRI from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI1) study at baseline and year one were used. Analysis on 3 groups of subjects was performed - 562 subjects at 1.5 T, a 75 subject group that also had manual segmentation and 111 subjects at 3 T. A simple and novel statistical test based on the binomial distribution was used that handled outlying data points robustly. Median hippocampal atrophy rates were -1.1%/year for healthy controls, -3.0%/year for mildly cognitively impaired and -5.1%/year for AD subjects. The best reproducibility was observed for MAPS-HBSI (1.3%), while the other methods tested had reproducibilities at least 50% higher at 1.5 T and 3 T which was statistically significant. For a clinical trial, MAPS-HBSI should require less than half the subjects of the other methods tested. All methods had good accuracy versus manual segmentation. The MAPS-HBSI method has substantially better reproducibility than the other methods considered.

Details

ISSN :
09254927
Volume :
252
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8595223f0ef673e91b16389b6d30b222
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pscychresns.2016.04.006