Multiclass characterization of frontotemporal dementia variants via multimodal brain network computational inference

Author:

Gonzalez-Gomez Raul12,Ibañez Agustín1345,Moguilner Sebastian2346ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Latin American Brain Health Institute (BrainLat), Universidad Adolfo Ibañez, Santiago de Chile, Chile

2. Center for Social and Cognitive Neuroscience, School of Psychology, Universidad Adolfo Ibañez, Santiago de Chile, Chile

3. Cognitive Neuroscience Center, Universidad de San Andres, Buenos Aires, Argentina

4. Global Brain Health Institute, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA

5. Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland

6. Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA

Abstract

Abstract Characterizing a particular neurodegenerative condition against others possible diseases remains a challenge along clinical, biomarker, and neuroscientific levels. This is the particular case of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) variants, where their specific characterization requires high levels of expertise and multidisciplinary teams to subtly distinguish among similar physiopathological processes. Here, we used a computational approach of multimodal brain networks to address simultaneous multiclass classification of 298 subjects (one group against all others), including five FTD variants: behavioral variant FTD, corticobasal syndrome, nonfluent variant primary progressive aphasia, progressive supranuclear palsy, and semantic variant primary progressive aphasia, with healthy controls. Fourteen machine learning classifiers were trained with functional and structural connectivity metrics calculated through different methods. Due to the large number of variables, dimensionality was reduced, employing statistical comparisons and progressive elimination to assess feature stability under nested cross-validation. The machine learning performance was measured through the area under the receiver operating characteristic curves, reaching 0.81 on average, with a standard deviation of 0.09. Furthermore, the contributions of demographic and cognitive data were also assessed via multifeatured classifiers. An accurate simultaneous multiclass classification of each FTD variant against other variants and controls was obtained based on the selection of an optimum set of features. The classifiers incorporating the brain’s network and cognitive assessment increased performance metrics. Multimodal classifiers evidenced specific variants’ compromise, across modalities and methods through feature importance analysis. If replicated and validated, this approach may help to support clinical decision tools aimed to detect specific affectations in the context of overlapping diseases.

Funder

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

Applied Mathematics,Artificial Intelligence,Computer Science Applications,General Neuroscience

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