Segmenting hypothalamic subunits in human newborn magnetic resonance imaging data

Author:

Rasmussen Jerod M.12ORCID,Wang Yun34,Graham Alice M.5,Fair Damien A.6,Posner Jonathan34,O'Connor Thomas G.7,Simhan Hyagriv N.8,Yen Elizabeth9,Madan Neel10,Entringer Sonja1211,Wadhwa Pathik D.12121314,Buss Claudia1211,

Affiliation:

1. Development, Health and Disease Research Program University of California Irvine California USA

2. Department of Pediatrics University of California Irvine California USA

3. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences Duke University Durham North Carolina USA

4. New York State Psychiatric Institute New York New York USA

5. Department of Behavioral Neuroscience Oregon Health & Science University Portland Oregon USA

6. Masonic Institute for the Developing Brain University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

7. Departments of Psychiatry, Psychology, Neuroscience and Obstetrics and Gynecology University of Rochester Medical Center Rochester New York USA

8. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh Pennsylvania USA

9. Department of Pediatrics Tufts Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA

10. Department of Radiology Tufts Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA

11. Department of Medical Psychology Charité – Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Corporate Member of Freie Universität Berlin and Humboldt‐Universität zu Berlin Berlin Germany

12. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior University of California Irvine California USA

13. Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology University of California Irvine California USA

14. Department of Epidemiology University of California Irvine California USA

Abstract

AbstractPreclinical evidence suggests that inter‐individual variation in the structure of the hypothalamus at birth is associated with variation in the intrauterine environment, with downstream implications for future disease susceptibility. However, scientific advancement in humans is limited by a lack of validated methods for the automatic segmentation of the newborn hypothalamus. N = 215 healthy full‐term infants with paired T1‐/T2‐weighted MR images across four sites were considered for primary analyses (mean postmenstrual age = 44.3 ± 3.5 weeks, nmale/nfemale = 110/106). The outputs of FreeSurfer's hypothalamic subunit segmentation tools designed for adults (segFS) were compared against those of a novel registration‐based pipeline developed here (segATLAS) and against manually edited segmentations (segMAN) as reference. Comparisons were made using Dice Similarity Coefficients (DSCs) and through expected associations with postmenstrual age at scan. In addition, we aimed to demonstrate the validity of the segATLAS pipeline by testing for the stability of inter‐individual variation in hypothalamic volume across the first year of life (n = 41 longitudinal datasets available). SegFS and segATLAS segmentations demonstrated a wide spread in agreement (mean DSC = 0.65 ± 0.14 SD; range = {0.03–0.80}). SegATLAS volumes were more highly correlated with postmenstrual age at scan than segFS volumes (n = 215 infants; RsegATLAS2 = 65% vs. RsegFS2 = 40%), and segATLAS volumes demonstrated a higher degree of agreement with segMAN reference segmentations at the whole hypothalamus (segATLAS DSC = 0.89 ± 0.06 SD; segFS DSC = 0.68 ± 0.14 SD) and subunit levels (segATLAS DSC = 0.80 ± 0.16 SD; segFS DSC = 0.40 ± 0.26 SD). In addition, segATLAS (but not segFS) volumes demonstrated stability from near birth to ~1 years age (n = 41; R2 = 25%; p < 10−3). These findings highlight segATLAS as a valid and publicly available (https://github.com/jerodras/neonate_hypothalamus_seg) pipeline for the segmentation of hypothalamic subunits using human newborn MRI up to 3 months of age collected at resolutions on the order of 1 mm isotropic. Because the hypothalamus is traditionally understudied due to a lack of high‐quality segmentation tools during the early life period, and because the hypothalamus is of high biological relevance to human growth and development, this tool may stimulate developmental and clinical research by providing new insight into the unique role of the hypothalamus and its subunits in shaping trajectories of early life health and disease.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases

National Institutes of Health

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Wiley

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