Multisite longitudinal reliability of tract-based spatial statistics in diffusion tensor imaging of healthy elderly subjects
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2014
Abstract:
Large-scale longitudinal neuroimaging studies with diffusion imaging techniques
are necessary to test and validate models of white matter neurophysiological
processes that change in time, both in healthy and diseased brains. The
predictive power of such longitudinal models will always be limited by the
reproducibility of repeated measures acquired during different sessions. At
present, there is limited quantitative knowledge about the across-session
reproducibility of standard diffusion metrics in 3T multi-centric studies on
subjects in stable conditions, in particular when using tract based spatial
statistics and with elderly people. In this study we implemented a multi-site
brain diffusion protocol in 10 clinical 3T MRI sites distributed across 4
countries in Europe (Italy, Germany, France and Greece) using vendor provided
sequences from Siemens (Allegra, Trio Tim, Verio, Skyra, Biograph mMR), Philips
(Achieva) and GE (HDxt) scanners. We acquired DTI data (2 × 2 × 2 mm(3), b = 700
s/mm(2), 5 b0 and 30 diffusion weighted volumes) of a group of healthy stable
elderly subjects (5 subjects per site) in two separate sessions at least a week
apart. For each subject and session four scalar diffusion metrics were
considered: fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), radial diffusivity
(RD) and axial (AD) diffusivity. The diffusion metrics from multiple subjects and
sessions at each site were aligned to their common white matter skeleton using
tract-based spatial statistics. The reproducibility at each MRI site was examined
by looking at group averages of absolute changes relative to the mean (%) on
various parameters: i) reproducibility of the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) of the
b0 images in centrum semiovale, ii) full brain test-retest differences of the
diffusion metric maps on the white matter skeleton, iii) reproducibility of the
diffusion metrics on atlas-based white matter ROIs on the white matter skeleton.
Despite the differences of MRI scanner configurations across sites (vendors,
models, RF coils and acquisition sequences) we found good and consistent
test-retest reproducibility. White matter b0 SNR reproducibility was on average 7
± 1% with no significant MRI site effects. Whole brain analysis resulted in no
significant test-retest differences at any of the sites with any of the DTI
metrics. The atlas-based ROI analysis showed that the mean reproducibility errors
largely remained in the 2-4% range for FA and AD and 2-6% for MD and RD, averaged
across ROIs. Our results show reproducibility values comparable to those reported
in studies using a smaller number of MRI scanners, slightly different DTI
protocols and mostly younger populations. We therefore show that the acquisition
and analysis protocols used are appropriate for multi-site experimental
scenarios.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Brain diffusion tensor imaging; Multi-center; Multi-site MRI; Reliability; Reproducibility; Tract-based spatial statistics; Aged; Aged, 80 and over; Diffusion Tensor Imaging; Female; Humans; Longitudinal Studies; Male; Middle Aged; Reproducibility of Results; White Matter; Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology; Medicine (all)
Elenco autori:
Jovicich, Jorge; Marizzoni, Moira; Bosch, Beatriz; Bartrés Faz, David; Arnold, Jennifer; Benninghoff, Jens; Wiltfang, Jens; Roccatagliata, Luca; Picco, Agnese; Nobili, Flavio; Blin, Oliver; Bombois, Stephanie; Lopes, Renaud; Bordet, Régis; Chanoine, Valérie; Ranjeva, Jean Philippe; Didic, Mira; Gros Dagnac, Hélène; Payoux, Pierre; Zoccatelli, Giada; Alessandrini, Franco; Beltramello, Alberto; Bargalló, Núria; Ferretti, Antonio; Caulo, Massimo; Aiello, Marco; Ragucci, Monica; Soricelli, Andrea; Salvadori, Nicola; Tarducci, Roberto; Floridi, Piero; Tsolaki, Magda; Constantinidis, Manos; Drevelegas, Antonios; Rossini, Paolo; Marra, Camillo; Otto, Josephin; Reiss Zimmermann, Martin; Hoffmann, Karl Titus; Galluzzi, Samantha; Frisoni, Giovanni B.
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