Reliability of structural brain change in cognitively healthy adult samples

Author:

Vidal-Piñeiro DidacORCID,Sørensen ØysteinORCID,Strømstad Marie,Amlien Inge K.,Anderson Micael,Baaré William F.C.,Bartrés-Faz David,Brandmaier Andreas M.ORCID,Bråthen Anne Cecilie,Garrido Pablo,Paolo Ghisletta,Grydeland HåkonORCID,Richard N. HensonORCID,Kievit Rogier A.,Kormacher Max,Kühn Simone,Lindenberger UlmanORCID,Mowinckel Athanasia M.,Nyberg Lars,Roe James M,Sneve Markus H.,Sole-Padulles Cristina,Watne Leiv-Otto,Walhovd Kristine B.,Fjell Anders M.

Abstract

AbstractIn neuroimaging research, tracking individuals over time is key to understanding the interplay between brain changes and genetic, environmental, or cognitive factors across the lifespan. Yet, the extent to which we can estimate the individual trajectories of brain change over time with precision remains uncertain. In this study, we estimated the reliability of structural brain change in cognitively healthy adults from multiple samples and assessed the influence of follow-up time and number of observations. Estimates of cross-sectional measurement error and brain change variance were obtained using the longitudinal FreeSurfer processing stream. Our findings showed, on average, modest longitudinal reliability with two years of follow-up. Increasing the follow-up time was associated with a substantial increase in longitudinal reliability while the impact of increasing the number of observations was comparatively minor. On average, 2-year follow-up studies require ≈2.7 and ≈4.0 times more individuals than designs with follow-ups of 4 and 6 years to achieve comparable statistical power. Subcortical volume exhibited higher longitudinal reliability compared to cortical area, thickness, and volume. The reliability estimates were comparable to those estimated from empirical data. The reliability estimates were affected by both the cohort’s age where younger adults had lower reliability of change, and the preprocessing pipeline where the FreeSurfer’s longitudinal stream was notably superior than the cross-sectional. Suboptimal reliability inflated sample size requirements and compromised the ability to distinguish individual trajectories of brain aging. This study underscores the importance of long-term follow-ups and the need to consider reliability in longitudinal neuroimaging research.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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