Abstract
AbstractAutomated tools have been proposed to quantify brain volume for suspected dementia diagnoses. However, their robustness in longitudinal, real-life cohorts remains unexplored. We investigated if expert visual assessment (EVA) of atrophy progression is reflected by automated volumetric analyses (AVA) on sequential MR-imaging. We analyzed a random subset of 20 patients with two consecutive 3D T1-weighted examinations (median follow-up 4.0 years, LQ-UQ: 2.1-5.2, range: 0.2-10). Thirteen (65%) with cognitive decline, the remaining with other neuropsychiatric diseases. EVA was performed by two blinded neuroradiologists using a 3 or 5-point Likert scale for atrophy progression (scores ±0-2: no, probable and certain progression or decrease, respectively) in dementia-relevant brain regions (frontal-, parietal-, temporal lobes, hippocampi, ventricles). Differences of AVA-volumes were normalized to baseline (delta). Inter-rater agreement of EVA scores was excellent (κ=0.92). AVA-delta and EVA showed significant global associations for the right hippocampus (p=0.035), left temporal lobe (p=0.0092), ventricle volume (p=0.0091) and a weak association for the parietal lobe (p=0.067).Post hoctesting revealed a significant link for the left hippocampus (p=0.039). In conclusion, the associations between volumetric deltas and EVA of atrophy progression were robust for certain brain regions. However, AVA-deltas showed unexpected variance, and therefore should be used with caution in individual cases, especially when acquisition protocols vary.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory