Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6034096 NeuroImage 2011 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundMedial temporal lobe (MTL) atrophy is one of the key biomarkers to detect early neurodegenerative changes in the course of Alzheimer's disease (AD). There is active research aimed at identifying automated methodologies able to extract accurate classification indexes from T1-weighted magnetic resonance images (MRI). Such indexes should be fit for identifying AD patients as early as possible.SubjectsA reference group composed of 144 AD patients and 189 age-matched controls was used to train and test the procedure. It was then applied on a study group composed of 302 MCI subjects, 136 having progressed to clinically probable AD (MCI-converters) and 166 having remained stable or recovered to normal condition after a 24 month follow-up (MCI-non converters). All subjects came from the ADNI database.MethodsWe sampled the brain with 7 relatively small volumes, mainly centered on the MTL, and 2 control regions. These volumes were filtered to give intensity and textural MRI-based features. Each filtered region was analyzed with a Random Forest (RF) classifier to extract relevant features, which were subsequently processed with a Support Vector Machine (SVM) classifier. Once a prediction model was trained and tested on the reference group, it was used to compute a classification index (CI) on the MCI cohort and to assess its accuracy in predicting AD conversion in MCI patients. The performance of the classification based on the features extracted by the whole 9 volumes is compared with that derived from each single volume. All experiments were performed using a bootstrap sampling estimation, and classifier performance was cross-validated with a 20-fold paradigm.ResultsWe identified a restricted set of image features correlated with the conversion to AD. It is shown that most information originate from a small subset of the total available features, and that it is enough to give a reliable assessment. We found multiple, highly localized image-based features which alone are responsible for the overall clinical diagnosis and prognosis. The classification index is able to discriminate Controls from AD with an Area Under Curve (AUC) = 0.97 (sensitivity ≃ 89% at specificity ≃ 94%) and Controls from MCI-converters with an AUC = 0.92 (sensitivity ≃ 89% at specificity ≃ 80%). MCI-converters are separated from MCI-non converters with AUC = 0.74(sensitivity ≃ 72% at specificity ≃ 65%).FindingsThe present automated MRI-based technique revealed a strong relationship between highly localized baseline-MRI features and the baseline clinical assessment. In addition, the classification index was also used to predict the probability of AD conversion within a time frame of two years. The definition of a single index combining local analysis of several regions can be useful to detect AD neurodegeneration in a typical MCI population.

Research highlights► Temporal lobe atrophy in MRI images is measured with a novel, automated technique. ► Small, highly localized volumes convey all the information. ► A localized features-based index is built to classify both individuals and cohorts. ► Discrimination accuracy is comparable to whole brain analyses in literature. ► The index can tell prodromal Alzheimer's disease patients from Controls with high accuracy.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
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