Cargando…

Reliability of structural MRI measurements: The effects of scan session, head tilt, inter-scan interval, acquisition sequence, FreeSurfer version and processing stream

BACKGROUND: Large-scale longitudinal and multi-centre studies are used to explore neuroimaging markers of normal ageing, and neurodegenerative and mental health disorders. Longitudinal changes in brain structure are typically small, therefore the reliability of automated techniques is crucial. Deter...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hedges, Emily P, Dimitrov, Mihail, Zahid, Uzma, Brito Vega, Barbara, Si, Shuqing, Dickson, Hannah, McGuire, Philip, Williams, Steven, Barker, Gareth J, Kempton, Matthew J
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Academic Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8784825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34848299
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118751
_version_ 1784638825019998208
author Hedges, Emily P
Dimitrov, Mihail
Zahid, Uzma
Brito Vega, Barbara
Si, Shuqing
Dickson, Hannah
McGuire, Philip
Williams, Steven
Barker, Gareth J
Kempton, Matthew J
author_facet Hedges, Emily P
Dimitrov, Mihail
Zahid, Uzma
Brito Vega, Barbara
Si, Shuqing
Dickson, Hannah
McGuire, Philip
Williams, Steven
Barker, Gareth J
Kempton, Matthew J
author_sort Hedges, Emily P
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Large-scale longitudinal and multi-centre studies are used to explore neuroimaging markers of normal ageing, and neurodegenerative and mental health disorders. Longitudinal changes in brain structure are typically small, therefore the reliability of automated techniques is crucial. Determining the effects of different factors on reliability allows investigators to control those adversely affecting reliability, calculate statistical power, or even avoid particular brain measures with low reliability. This study examined the impact of several image acquisition and processing factors and documented the test-retest reliability of structural MRI measurements. METHODS: In Phase I, 20 healthy adults (11 females; aged 20–30 years) were scanned on two occasions three weeks apart on the same scanner using the ADNI-3 protocol. On each occasion, individuals were scanned twice (repetition), after re-entering the scanner (reposition) and after tilting their head forward. At one year follow-up, nine returning individuals and 11 new volunteers were recruited for Phase II (11 females; aged 22–31 years). Scans were acquired on two different scanners using the ADNI-2 and ADNI-3 protocols. Structural images were processed using FreeSurfer (v5.3.0, 6.0.0 and 7.1.0) to provide subcortical and cortical volume, cortical surface area and thickness measurements. Intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) were calculated to estimate test-retest reliability. We examined the effect of repetition, reposition, head tilt, time between scans, MRI sequence and scanner on reliability of structural brain measurements. Mean percentage differences were also calculated in supplementary analyses. RESULTS: Using the FreeSurfer v7.1.0 longitudinal pipeline, we observed high reliability for subcortical and cortical volumes, and cortical surface areas at repetition, reposition, three weeks and one year (mean ICCs>0.97). Cortical thickness reliability was lower (mean ICCs>0.82). Head tilt had the greatest adverse impact on ICC estimates, for example reducing mean right cortical thickness to ICC=0.74. In contrast, changes in ADNI sequence or MRI scanner had a minimal effect. We observed an increase in reliability for updated FreeSurfer versions, with the longitudinal pipeline consistently having a higher reliability than the cross-sectional pipeline. DISCUSSION: Longitudinal studies should monitor or control head tilt to maximise reliability. We provided the ICC estimates and mean percentage differences for all FreeSurfer brain regions, which may inform power analyses for clinical studies and have implications for the design of future longitudinal studies.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8784825
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher Academic Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87848252022-02-01 Reliability of structural MRI measurements: The effects of scan session, head tilt, inter-scan interval, acquisition sequence, FreeSurfer version and processing stream Hedges, Emily P Dimitrov, Mihail Zahid, Uzma Brito Vega, Barbara Si, Shuqing Dickson, Hannah McGuire, Philip Williams, Steven Barker, Gareth J Kempton, Matthew J Neuroimage Article BACKGROUND: Large-scale longitudinal and multi-centre studies are used to explore neuroimaging markers of normal ageing, and neurodegenerative and mental health disorders. Longitudinal changes in brain structure are typically small, therefore the reliability of automated techniques is crucial. Determining the effects of different factors on reliability allows investigators to control those adversely affecting reliability, calculate statistical power, or even avoid particular brain measures with low reliability. This study examined the impact of several image acquisition and processing factors and documented the test-retest reliability of structural MRI measurements. METHODS: In Phase I, 20 healthy adults (11 females; aged 20–30 years) were scanned on two occasions three weeks apart on the same scanner using the ADNI-3 protocol. On each occasion, individuals were scanned twice (repetition), after re-entering the scanner (reposition) and after tilting their head forward. At one year follow-up, nine returning individuals and 11 new volunteers were recruited for Phase II (11 females; aged 22–31 years). Scans were acquired on two different scanners using the ADNI-2 and ADNI-3 protocols. Structural images were processed using FreeSurfer (v5.3.0, 6.0.0 and 7.1.0) to provide subcortical and cortical volume, cortical surface area and thickness measurements. Intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) were calculated to estimate test-retest reliability. We examined the effect of repetition, reposition, head tilt, time between scans, MRI sequence and scanner on reliability of structural brain measurements. Mean percentage differences were also calculated in supplementary analyses. RESULTS: Using the FreeSurfer v7.1.0 longitudinal pipeline, we observed high reliability for subcortical and cortical volumes, and cortical surface areas at repetition, reposition, three weeks and one year (mean ICCs>0.97). Cortical thickness reliability was lower (mean ICCs>0.82). Head tilt had the greatest adverse impact on ICC estimates, for example reducing mean right cortical thickness to ICC=0.74. In contrast, changes in ADNI sequence or MRI scanner had a minimal effect. We observed an increase in reliability for updated FreeSurfer versions, with the longitudinal pipeline consistently having a higher reliability than the cross-sectional pipeline. DISCUSSION: Longitudinal studies should monitor or control head tilt to maximise reliability. We provided the ICC estimates and mean percentage differences for all FreeSurfer brain regions, which may inform power analyses for clinical studies and have implications for the design of future longitudinal studies. Academic Press 2022-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8784825/ /pubmed/34848299 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118751 Text en © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Hedges, Emily P
Dimitrov, Mihail
Zahid, Uzma
Brito Vega, Barbara
Si, Shuqing
Dickson, Hannah
McGuire, Philip
Williams, Steven
Barker, Gareth J
Kempton, Matthew J
Reliability of structural MRI measurements: The effects of scan session, head tilt, inter-scan interval, acquisition sequence, FreeSurfer version and processing stream
title Reliability of structural MRI measurements: The effects of scan session, head tilt, inter-scan interval, acquisition sequence, FreeSurfer version and processing stream
title_full Reliability of structural MRI measurements: The effects of scan session, head tilt, inter-scan interval, acquisition sequence, FreeSurfer version and processing stream
title_fullStr Reliability of structural MRI measurements: The effects of scan session, head tilt, inter-scan interval, acquisition sequence, FreeSurfer version and processing stream
title_full_unstemmed Reliability of structural MRI measurements: The effects of scan session, head tilt, inter-scan interval, acquisition sequence, FreeSurfer version and processing stream
title_short Reliability of structural MRI measurements: The effects of scan session, head tilt, inter-scan interval, acquisition sequence, FreeSurfer version and processing stream
title_sort reliability of structural mri measurements: the effects of scan session, head tilt, inter-scan interval, acquisition sequence, freesurfer version and processing stream
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8784825/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34848299
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118751
work_keys_str_mv AT hedgesemilyp reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream
AT dimitrovmihail reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream
AT zahiduzma reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream
AT britovegabarbara reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream
AT sishuqing reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream
AT dicksonhannah reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream
AT mcguirephilip reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream
AT williamssteven reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream
AT barkergarethj reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream
AT kemptonmatthewj reliabilityofstructuralmrimeasurementstheeffectsofscansessionheadtiltinterscanintervalacquisitionsequencefreesurferversionandprocessingstream