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Sociodemographic data and APOE-ε4 augmentation for MRI-based detection of amnestic mild cognitive impairment using deep learning systems

Detection and diagnosis of early and subclinical stages of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) play an essential role in the implementation of intervention and prevention strategies. Neuroimaging techniques predominantly provide insight into anatomic structure changes associated with AD. Deep learning methods...

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Autores principales: Pelka, Obioma, Friedrich, Christoph M., Nensa, Felix, Mönninghoff, Christoph, Bloch, Louise, Jöckel, Karl-Heinz, Schramm, Sara, Sanchez Hoffmann, Sarah, Winkler, Angela, Weimar, Christian, Jokisch, Martha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7518632/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32976486
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236868
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author Pelka, Obioma
Friedrich, Christoph M.
Nensa, Felix
Mönninghoff, Christoph
Bloch, Louise
Jöckel, Karl-Heinz
Schramm, Sara
Sanchez Hoffmann, Sarah
Winkler, Angela
Weimar, Christian
Jokisch, Martha
author_facet Pelka, Obioma
Friedrich, Christoph M.
Nensa, Felix
Mönninghoff, Christoph
Bloch, Louise
Jöckel, Karl-Heinz
Schramm, Sara
Sanchez Hoffmann, Sarah
Winkler, Angela
Weimar, Christian
Jokisch, Martha
author_sort Pelka, Obioma
collection PubMed
description Detection and diagnosis of early and subclinical stages of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) play an essential role in the implementation of intervention and prevention strategies. Neuroimaging techniques predominantly provide insight into anatomic structure changes associated with AD. Deep learning methods have been extensively applied towards creating and evaluating models capable of differentiating between cognitively unimpaired, patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and AD dementia. Several published approaches apply information fusion techniques, providing ways of combining several input sources in the medical domain, which contributes to knowledge of broader and enriched quality. The aim of this paper is to fuse sociodemographic data such as age, marital status, education and gender, and genetic data (presence of an apolipoprotein E (APOE)-ε4 allele) with Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans. This enables enriched multi-modal features, that adequately represent the MRI scan visually and is adopted for creating and modeling classification systems capable of detecting amnestic MCI (aMCI). To fully utilize the potential of deep convolutional neural networks, two extra color layers denoting contrast intensified and blurred image adaptations are virtually augmented to each MRI scan, completing the Red-Green-Blue (RGB) color channels. Deep convolutional activation features (DeCAF) are extracted from the average pooling layer of the deep learning system Inception_v3. These features from the fused MRI scans are used as visual representation for the Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) based Recurrent Neural Network (RNN) classification model. The proposed approach is evaluated on a sub-study containing 120 participants (aMCI = 61 and cognitively unimpaired = 59) of the Heinz Nixdorf Recall (HNR) Study with a baseline model accuracy of 76%. Further evaluation was conducted on the ADNI Phase 1 dataset with 624 participants (aMCI = 397 and cognitively unimpaired = 227) with a baseline model accuracy of 66.27%. Experimental results show that the proposed approach achieves 90% accuracy and 0.90 F(1)-Score at classification of aMCI vs. cognitively unimpaired participants on the HNR Study dataset, and 77% accuracy and 0.83 F(1)-Score on the ADNI dataset.
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spelling pubmed-75186322020-10-02 Sociodemographic data and APOE-ε4 augmentation for MRI-based detection of amnestic mild cognitive impairment using deep learning systems Pelka, Obioma Friedrich, Christoph M. Nensa, Felix Mönninghoff, Christoph Bloch, Louise Jöckel, Karl-Heinz Schramm, Sara Sanchez Hoffmann, Sarah Winkler, Angela Weimar, Christian Jokisch, Martha PLoS One Research Article Detection and diagnosis of early and subclinical stages of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) play an essential role in the implementation of intervention and prevention strategies. Neuroimaging techniques predominantly provide insight into anatomic structure changes associated with AD. Deep learning methods have been extensively applied towards creating and evaluating models capable of differentiating between cognitively unimpaired, patients with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and AD dementia. Several published approaches apply information fusion techniques, providing ways of combining several input sources in the medical domain, which contributes to knowledge of broader and enriched quality. The aim of this paper is to fuse sociodemographic data such as age, marital status, education and gender, and genetic data (presence of an apolipoprotein E (APOE)-ε4 allele) with Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) scans. This enables enriched multi-modal features, that adequately represent the MRI scan visually and is adopted for creating and modeling classification systems capable of detecting amnestic MCI (aMCI). To fully utilize the potential of deep convolutional neural networks, two extra color layers denoting contrast intensified and blurred image adaptations are virtually augmented to each MRI scan, completing the Red-Green-Blue (RGB) color channels. Deep convolutional activation features (DeCAF) are extracted from the average pooling layer of the deep learning system Inception_v3. These features from the fused MRI scans are used as visual representation for the Long Short-Term Memory (LSTM) based Recurrent Neural Network (RNN) classification model. The proposed approach is evaluated on a sub-study containing 120 participants (aMCI = 61 and cognitively unimpaired = 59) of the Heinz Nixdorf Recall (HNR) Study with a baseline model accuracy of 76%. Further evaluation was conducted on the ADNI Phase 1 dataset with 624 participants (aMCI = 397 and cognitively unimpaired = 227) with a baseline model accuracy of 66.27%. Experimental results show that the proposed approach achieves 90% accuracy and 0.90 F(1)-Score at classification of aMCI vs. cognitively unimpaired participants on the HNR Study dataset, and 77% accuracy and 0.83 F(1)-Score on the ADNI dataset. Public Library of Science 2020-09-25 /pmc/articles/PMC7518632/ /pubmed/32976486 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236868 Text en © 2020 Pelka et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pelka, Obioma
Friedrich, Christoph M.
Nensa, Felix
Mönninghoff, Christoph
Bloch, Louise
Jöckel, Karl-Heinz
Schramm, Sara
Sanchez Hoffmann, Sarah
Winkler, Angela
Weimar, Christian
Jokisch, Martha
Sociodemographic data and APOE-ε4 augmentation for MRI-based detection of amnestic mild cognitive impairment using deep learning systems
title Sociodemographic data and APOE-ε4 augmentation for MRI-based detection of amnestic mild cognitive impairment using deep learning systems
title_full Sociodemographic data and APOE-ε4 augmentation for MRI-based detection of amnestic mild cognitive impairment using deep learning systems
title_fullStr Sociodemographic data and APOE-ε4 augmentation for MRI-based detection of amnestic mild cognitive impairment using deep learning systems
title_full_unstemmed Sociodemographic data and APOE-ε4 augmentation for MRI-based detection of amnestic mild cognitive impairment using deep learning systems
title_short Sociodemographic data and APOE-ε4 augmentation for MRI-based detection of amnestic mild cognitive impairment using deep learning systems
title_sort sociodemographic data and apoe-ε4 augmentation for mri-based detection of amnestic mild cognitive impairment using deep learning systems
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7518632/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32976486
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236868
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