Radiomics: a novel feature extraction method for brain neuron degeneration disease using 18F-FDG PET imaging and its implementation for Alzheimer’s disease and mild cognitive impairment

Author:

Li Yupeng1,Jiang Jiehui2ORCID,Lu Jiaying3,Jiang Juanjuan1,Zhang Huiwei3,Zuo Chuantao34

Affiliation:

1. Shanghai Institute for Advanced Communication and Data Science, Shanghai University, Shanghai, China

2. Shanghai Institute for Advanced Communication and Data Science, Shanghai University, T Building, 99 ShangDa Road, BaoShan District, Shanghai, 200444, China

3. PET Center, Huashan Hospital, Fudan University, Shanghai, China

4. Institute of Functional and Molecular Medical Imaging, Fudan University, Shanghai, China

Abstract

Background: Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common form of progressive and irreversible dementia, and accurate diagnosis of AD at its prodromal stage is clinically important. Currently, computer-aided diagnosis of AD and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) using 18F-fluorodeoxy-glucose positron emission tomography (18F-FDG PET) imaging is usually based on low-level imaging features or deep learning methods, which have difficulties in achieving sufficient classification accuracy or lack clinical significance. This research therefore aimed to implement a new feature extraction method known as radiomics, to improve the classification accuracy and discover high-order features that can reveal pathological information. Methods: In this study, 18F-FDG PET and clinical assessments were collected in a cohort of 422 individuals [including 130 with AD, 130 with MCI, and 162 healthy controls (HCs)] from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) and 44 individuals (including 22 with AD, and 22 HCs) from Huashan Hospital, Shanghai, China. First, we performed a group comparison using a two-sample Student’s t test to determine the regions of interest (ROIs) based on 30 AD patients and 30 HCs from ADNI cohorts. Second, based on two time scans of 32 HCs from ADNI cohorts, we used Cronbach’s alpha coefficient for radiomic feature stability analyses. Pearson’s correlation coefficients were regarded as a feature selection criterion, to select effective features associated with the clinical cognitive scale [clinical dementia rating scale in its sum of boxes (CDRSB); Alzheimer’s disease assessment scale (ADAS)] with 500-times cross-validation. Finally, a support vector machine (SVM) was used to test the ability of the radiomic features to classify HCs, MCI and AD patients. Results: As a result, we identified brain regions which were mainly distributed in the temporal, occipital and frontal areas as ROIs. A total of 168 radiomic features of AD were stable (alpha > 0.8). The classification experiment led to maximal accuracies of 91.5%, 83.1% and 85.9% for classifying AD versus HC, MCI versus HCs and AD versus MCI. Conclusion: The research in this paper proved that the novel approach based on high-order radiomic features extracted from 18F-FDG PET brain images that can be used for AD and MCI computer-aided diagnosis.

Funder

Key Project in Healthcare

National Science Foundation of China

national natural science foundation of china

Shanghai National Science Foundation

Shanghai Sailing Program

Shanghai Technology and Science Key Project in Healthcare

national basic research program of china

science and technology commission of shanghai municipality

fudan university

dod alzheimer"s disease neuroimaging initiative

National Institute of Aging

national institute of biomedical imaging and bioengineering

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Clinical Neurology,Neurology,Pharmacology

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