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FLAIR MRI biomarkers of the normal appearing brain matter are related to cognition()

A novel biomarker panel was proposed to quantify macro and microstructural biomarkers from the normal-appearing brain matter (NABM) in multicentre fluid-attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI. The NABM is composed of the white and gray matter regions of the brain, with the lesions and cerebrospi...

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Autores principales: Bahsoun, M-A., Khan, M.U., Mitha, S., Ghazvanchahi, A., Khosravani, H., Jabehdar Maralani, P., Tardif, J-C., Moody, A.R., Tyrrell, P.N., Khademi, A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8857609/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35180579
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.102955
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author Bahsoun, M-A.
Khan, M.U.
Mitha, S.
Ghazvanchahi, A.
Khosravani, H.
Jabehdar Maralani, P.
Tardif, J-C.
Moody, A.R.
Tyrrell, P.N.
Khademi, A.
author_facet Bahsoun, M-A.
Khan, M.U.
Mitha, S.
Ghazvanchahi, A.
Khosravani, H.
Jabehdar Maralani, P.
Tardif, J-C.
Moody, A.R.
Tyrrell, P.N.
Khademi, A.
author_sort Bahsoun, M-A.
collection PubMed
description A novel biomarker panel was proposed to quantify macro and microstructural biomarkers from the normal-appearing brain matter (NABM) in multicentre fluid-attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI. The NABM is composed of the white and gray matter regions of the brain, with the lesions and cerebrospinal fluid removed. The primary hypothesis was that NABM biomarkers from FLAIR MRI are related to cognitive outcome as determined by MoCA score. There were three groups of features designed for this task based on 1) texture: microstructural integrity (MII), macrostructural damage (MAD), microstructural damage (MID), 2) intensity: median, skewness, kurtosis and 3) volume: NABM to ICV volume ratio. Biomarkers were extracted from over 1400 imaging volumes from more than 87 centres and unadjusted ANOVA analysis revealed significant differences in means of the MII, MAD, and NABM volume biomarkers across all cognitive groups. In an adjusted ANCOVA model, a significant relationship between MoCA categories was found that was dependent on subject age for MII, MAD, intensity, kurtosis and NABM volume biomarkers. These results demonstrate that structural brain changes in the NABM are related to cognitive outcome (with different relationships depending on the age of the subjects). Therefore these biomarkers have high potential for clinical translation. As a secondary hypothesis, we investigated whether texture features from FLAIR MRI can quantify microstructural changes related to how “structured” or “damaged” the tissue is. Based on correlation analysis with diffusion weighted MRI (dMRI), it was shown that FLAIR MRI texture biomarkers (MII and MAD) had strong correlations to mean diffusivity (MD) which is related to tissue degeneration in the GM and WM regions. As FLAIR MRI is routinely collected for clinical neurological examinations, novel biomarkers from FLAIR MRI could be used to supplement current clinical biomarkers and for monitoring disease progression. Biomarkers could also be used to stratify patients into homogeneous disease subgroups for clinical trials, or to learn more about mechanistic development of dementia disease.
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spelling pubmed-88576092022-03-02 FLAIR MRI biomarkers of the normal appearing brain matter are related to cognition() Bahsoun, M-A. Khan, M.U. Mitha, S. Ghazvanchahi, A. Khosravani, H. Jabehdar Maralani, P. Tardif, J-C. Moody, A.R. Tyrrell, P.N. Khademi, A. Neuroimage Clin Regular Article A novel biomarker panel was proposed to quantify macro and microstructural biomarkers from the normal-appearing brain matter (NABM) in multicentre fluid-attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI. The NABM is composed of the white and gray matter regions of the brain, with the lesions and cerebrospinal fluid removed. The primary hypothesis was that NABM biomarkers from FLAIR MRI are related to cognitive outcome as determined by MoCA score. There were three groups of features designed for this task based on 1) texture: microstructural integrity (MII), macrostructural damage (MAD), microstructural damage (MID), 2) intensity: median, skewness, kurtosis and 3) volume: NABM to ICV volume ratio. Biomarkers were extracted from over 1400 imaging volumes from more than 87 centres and unadjusted ANOVA analysis revealed significant differences in means of the MII, MAD, and NABM volume biomarkers across all cognitive groups. In an adjusted ANCOVA model, a significant relationship between MoCA categories was found that was dependent on subject age for MII, MAD, intensity, kurtosis and NABM volume biomarkers. These results demonstrate that structural brain changes in the NABM are related to cognitive outcome (with different relationships depending on the age of the subjects). Therefore these biomarkers have high potential for clinical translation. As a secondary hypothesis, we investigated whether texture features from FLAIR MRI can quantify microstructural changes related to how “structured” or “damaged” the tissue is. Based on correlation analysis with diffusion weighted MRI (dMRI), it was shown that FLAIR MRI texture biomarkers (MII and MAD) had strong correlations to mean diffusivity (MD) which is related to tissue degeneration in the GM and WM regions. As FLAIR MRI is routinely collected for clinical neurological examinations, novel biomarkers from FLAIR MRI could be used to supplement current clinical biomarkers and for monitoring disease progression. Biomarkers could also be used to stratify patients into homogeneous disease subgroups for clinical trials, or to learn more about mechanistic development of dementia disease. Elsevier 2022-02-08 /pmc/articles/PMC8857609/ /pubmed/35180579 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.102955 Text en © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular Article
Bahsoun, M-A.
Khan, M.U.
Mitha, S.
Ghazvanchahi, A.
Khosravani, H.
Jabehdar Maralani, P.
Tardif, J-C.
Moody, A.R.
Tyrrell, P.N.
Khademi, A.
FLAIR MRI biomarkers of the normal appearing brain matter are related to cognition()
title FLAIR MRI biomarkers of the normal appearing brain matter are related to cognition()
title_full FLAIR MRI biomarkers of the normal appearing brain matter are related to cognition()
title_fullStr FLAIR MRI biomarkers of the normal appearing brain matter are related to cognition()
title_full_unstemmed FLAIR MRI biomarkers of the normal appearing brain matter are related to cognition()
title_short FLAIR MRI biomarkers of the normal appearing brain matter are related to cognition()
title_sort flair mri biomarkers of the normal appearing brain matter are related to cognition()
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8857609/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35180579
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.102955
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