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Comparison of two computed tomography perfusion post-processing software to assess infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke

OBJECTIVES: We used two automated software commonly employed in clinical practice—Olea Sphere (Olea) and Shukun-PerfusionGo (PerfusionGo)—to compare the diagnostic utility and volumetric agreement of computed tomography perfusion (CTP)-predicted final infarct volume (FIV) with true FIV in patients w...

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Autores principales: Liu, Jiayang, Wang, Jingjie, Wu, Jiajing, Gu, Sirun, Yao, Yunzhuo, Li, Jing, Li, Yongmei, Ren, Huanhuan, Luo, Tianyou
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10166848/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37179549
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1151823
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author Liu, Jiayang
Wang, Jingjie
Wu, Jiajing
Gu, Sirun
Yao, Yunzhuo
Li, Jing
Li, Yongmei
Ren, Huanhuan
Luo, Tianyou
author_facet Liu, Jiayang
Wang, Jingjie
Wu, Jiajing
Gu, Sirun
Yao, Yunzhuo
Li, Jing
Li, Yongmei
Ren, Huanhuan
Luo, Tianyou
author_sort Liu, Jiayang
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: We used two automated software commonly employed in clinical practice—Olea Sphere (Olea) and Shukun-PerfusionGo (PerfusionGo)—to compare the diagnostic utility and volumetric agreement of computed tomography perfusion (CTP)-predicted final infarct volume (FIV) with true FIV in patients with anterior-circulation acute ischemic stroke (AIS). METHODS: In all, 122 patients with anterior-circulation AIS who met the inclusion and exclusion criteria were retrospectively enrolled and divided into two groups: intervention group (n = 52) and conservative group (n = 70), according to recanalization of blood vessels and clinical outcome (NIHSS) after different treatments. Patients in both groups underwent one-stop 4D-CT angiography (CTA)/CTP, and the raw CTP data were processed on a workstation using Olea and PerfusionGo post-processing software, to calculate and obtain the ischemic core (IC) and hypoperfusion (IC plus penumbra) volumes, hypoperfusion in the conservative group and IC in the intervention group were used to define the predicted FIV. The ITK-SNAP software was used to manually outline and measure true FIV on the follow-up non-enhanced CT or MRI-DWI images. Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), Bland–Altman, and Kappa analysis were used to compare the differences in IC and penumbra volumes calculated by the Olea and PerfusionGo software to investigate the relationship between their predicted FIV and true FIV. RESULTS: The IC and penumbra difference between Olea and PerfusionGo within the same group (p < 0.001) was statistically significant. Olea obtained larger IC and smaller penumbra than PerfusionGo. Both software partially overestimated the infarct volume, but Olea significantly overestimated it by a larger percentage. ICC analysis showed that Olea performed better than PerfusionGo (intervention-Olea: ICC 0.633, 95%CI 0.439–0.771; intervention-PerfusionGo: ICC 0.526, 95%CI 0.299–0.696; conservative-Olea: ICC 0.623, 95%CI 0.457–0.747; conservative-PerfusionGo: ICC 0.507, 95%CI 0.312–0.662). Olea and PerfusionGo had the same capacity in accurately diagnosing and classifying patients with infarct volume <70 ml. CONCLUSION: Both software had differences in the evaluation of the IC and penumbra. Olea’s predicted FIV was more closely correlated with the true FIV than PerfusionGo’s prediction. Accurate assessment of infarction on CTP post-processing software remains challenging. Our results may have important practice implications for the clinical use of perfusion post-processing software.
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spelling pubmed-101668482023-05-10 Comparison of two computed tomography perfusion post-processing software to assess infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke Liu, Jiayang Wang, Jingjie Wu, Jiajing Gu, Sirun Yao, Yunzhuo Li, Jing Li, Yongmei Ren, Huanhuan Luo, Tianyou Front Neurosci Neuroscience OBJECTIVES: We used two automated software commonly employed in clinical practice—Olea Sphere (Olea) and Shukun-PerfusionGo (PerfusionGo)—to compare the diagnostic utility and volumetric agreement of computed tomography perfusion (CTP)-predicted final infarct volume (FIV) with true FIV in patients with anterior-circulation acute ischemic stroke (AIS). METHODS: In all, 122 patients with anterior-circulation AIS who met the inclusion and exclusion criteria were retrospectively enrolled and divided into two groups: intervention group (n = 52) and conservative group (n = 70), according to recanalization of blood vessels and clinical outcome (NIHSS) after different treatments. Patients in both groups underwent one-stop 4D-CT angiography (CTA)/CTP, and the raw CTP data were processed on a workstation using Olea and PerfusionGo post-processing software, to calculate and obtain the ischemic core (IC) and hypoperfusion (IC plus penumbra) volumes, hypoperfusion in the conservative group and IC in the intervention group were used to define the predicted FIV. The ITK-SNAP software was used to manually outline and measure true FIV on the follow-up non-enhanced CT or MRI-DWI images. Intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC), Bland–Altman, and Kappa analysis were used to compare the differences in IC and penumbra volumes calculated by the Olea and PerfusionGo software to investigate the relationship between their predicted FIV and true FIV. RESULTS: The IC and penumbra difference between Olea and PerfusionGo within the same group (p < 0.001) was statistically significant. Olea obtained larger IC and smaller penumbra than PerfusionGo. Both software partially overestimated the infarct volume, but Olea significantly overestimated it by a larger percentage. ICC analysis showed that Olea performed better than PerfusionGo (intervention-Olea: ICC 0.633, 95%CI 0.439–0.771; intervention-PerfusionGo: ICC 0.526, 95%CI 0.299–0.696; conservative-Olea: ICC 0.623, 95%CI 0.457–0.747; conservative-PerfusionGo: ICC 0.507, 95%CI 0.312–0.662). Olea and PerfusionGo had the same capacity in accurately diagnosing and classifying patients with infarct volume <70 ml. CONCLUSION: Both software had differences in the evaluation of the IC and penumbra. Olea’s predicted FIV was more closely correlated with the true FIV than PerfusionGo’s prediction. Accurate assessment of infarction on CTP post-processing software remains challenging. Our results may have important practice implications for the clinical use of perfusion post-processing software. Frontiers Media S.A. 2023-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC10166848/ /pubmed/37179549 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1151823 Text en Copyright © 2023 Liu, Wang, Wu, Gu, Yao, Li, Li, Ren and Luo. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Neuroscience
Liu, Jiayang
Wang, Jingjie
Wu, Jiajing
Gu, Sirun
Yao, Yunzhuo
Li, Jing
Li, Yongmei
Ren, Huanhuan
Luo, Tianyou
Comparison of two computed tomography perfusion post-processing software to assess infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke
title Comparison of two computed tomography perfusion post-processing software to assess infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke
title_full Comparison of two computed tomography perfusion post-processing software to assess infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke
title_fullStr Comparison of two computed tomography perfusion post-processing software to assess infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of two computed tomography perfusion post-processing software to assess infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke
title_short Comparison of two computed tomography perfusion post-processing software to assess infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke
title_sort comparison of two computed tomography perfusion post-processing software to assess infarct volume in patients with acute ischemic stroke
topic Neuroscience
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10166848/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37179549
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1151823
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