Longitudinal reproducibility of default-mode network connectivity in healthy elderly participants: A multicentric resting-state fMRI study
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2016
Abstract:
To date, limited data are available regarding the inter-site consistency of
test-retest reproducibility of functional connectivity measurements, in
particular with regard to integrity of the Default Mode Network (DMN) in elderly
participants. We implemented a harmonized resting-state fMRI protocol on 13
clinical scanners at 3.0T using vendor-provided sequences. Each site scanned a
group of 5 healthy elderly participants twice, at least a week apart. We
evaluated inter-site differences and test-retest reproducibility of both temporal
signal-to-noise ratio (tSNR) and functional connectivity measurements derived
from: i) seed-based analysis (SBA) with seed in the posterior cingulate cortex
(PCC), ii) group independent component analysis (ICA) separately for each site
(site ICA), and iii) consortium ICA, with group ICA across the whole consortium.
Despite protocol harmonization, significant and quantitatively important
inter-site differences remained in the tSNR of resting-state fMRI data; these
were plausibly driven by hardware and pulse sequence differences across scanners
which could not be harmonized. Nevertheless, the tSNR test-retest reproducibility
in the consortium was high (ICC=0.81). The DMN was consistently extracted across
all sites and analysis methods. While significant inter-site differences in
connectivity scores were found, there were no differences in the associated
test-retest error. Overall, ICA measurements were more reliable than PCC-SBA,
with site ICA showing higher reproducibility than consortium ICA. Across the DMN
nodes, the PCC yielded the most reliable measurements (≈4% test-retest error,
ICC=0.85), the medial frontal cortex the least reliable (≈12%, ICC=0.82) and the
lateral parietal cortices were in between (site ICA). Altogether these findings
support usage of harmonized multisite studies of resting-state functional
connectivity to characterize longitudinal effects in studies that assess disease
progression and treatment response.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Default Mode Network; Functional connectivity; Multi-center; Multi-site MRI; Reproducibility; Cognitive Neuroscience; Neurology
Elenco autori:
Jovicich, Jorge; Minati, Ludovico; Marizzoni, Moira; Marchitelli, Rocco; Sala Llonch, Roser; Bartrés Faz, David; Arnold, Jennifer; Benninghoff, Jens; Fiedler, Ute; Roccatagliata, Luca; Picco, Agnese; Nobili, Flavio; Blin, Oliver; Bombois, Stephanie; Lopes, Renaud; Bordet, Régis; Sein, Julien; Ranjeva, Jean Philippe; Didic, Mira; Gros Dagnac, Hélène; Payoux, Pierre; Zoccatelli, Giada; Alessandrini, Franco; Beltramello, Alberto; Bargalló, Núria; Ferretti, Antonio; Caulo, Massimo; Aiello, Marco; Cavaliere, Carlo; Soricelli, Andrea; Parnetti, Lucilla; Tarducci, Roberto; Floridi, Piero; Tsolaki, Magda; Constantinidis, Manos; Drevelegas, Antonios; Rossini, Paolo Maria; Marra, Camillo; Schönknecht, Peter; Hensch, Tilman; Hoffmann, Karl Titus; Kuijer, Joost P.; Visser, Pieter Jelle; Barkhof, Frederik; Frisoni, Giovanni B.
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