Automatic quantification of white matter hyperintensities on T2-weighted fluid attenuated inversion recovery magnetic resonance imaging

White matter hyperintensities (WMH) are areas of increased signal visualized on T2-weighted fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences. They are typically attributed to small vessel cerebrovascular disease in the context of aging. Among older adults,...

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Published inMagnetic resonance imaging Vol. 85; pp. 71 - 79
Main Authors Igwe, Kay C., Lao, Patrick J., Vorburger, Robert S., Banerjee, Arit, Rivera, Andres, Chesebro, Anthony, Laing, Krystal, Manly, Jennifer J., Brickman, Adam M.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier Inc 01.01.2022
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Summary:White matter hyperintensities (WMH) are areas of increased signal visualized on T2-weighted fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) sequences. They are typically attributed to small vessel cerebrovascular disease in the context of aging. Among older adults, WMH are associated with risk of cognitive decline and dementia, stroke, and various other health outcomes. There has been increasing interest in incorporating quantitative WMH measurement as outcomes in clinical trials, observational research, and clinical settings. Here, we present a novel, fully automated, unsupervised detection algorithm for WMH segmentation and quantification. The algorithm uses a robust preprocessing pipeline, including brain extraction and a sample-specific mask that incorporates spatial information for automatic false positive reduction, and a half Gaussian mixture model (HGMM). The method was evaluated in 24 participants with varying degrees of WMH (4.9–78.6 cm3) from a community-based study of aging and dementia with dice coefficient, sensitivity, specificity, correlation, and bias relative to the ground truth manual segmentation approach performed by two expert raters. Results were compared with those derived from commonly used available WMH segmentation packages, including SPM lesion probability algorithm (LPA), SPM lesion growing algorithm (LGA), and Brain Intensity AbNormality Classification Algorithm (BIANCA). The HGMM algorithm derived WMH values that had a dice score of 0.87, sensitivity of 0.89, and specificity of 0.99 compared to ground truth. White matter hyperintensity volumes derived with HGMM were strongly correlated with ground truth values (r = 0.97, p = 3.9e-16), with no observable bias (−1.1 [−2.6, 0.44], p-value = 0.16). Our novel algorithm uniquely uses a robust preprocessing pipeline and a half-Gaussian mixture model to segment WMH with high agreement with ground truth for large scale studies of brain aging.
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Andres Rivera MS: Validation
Adam M. Brickman: Supervision, Writing- review and editing, Funding acquisition, Project administration, Investigation, Conceptualization
Kay C. Igwe MS: Conceptualization, Formal Analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Software, Validation, Writing-Original and final draft preparation, Visualization
Arit Banerjee MS: Validation
Jennifer Manly PhD: Supervision
Patrick J. Lao PhD: Supervision, Visualization, Writing—reviewing and editing
Anthony Chesebro: Validation
Robert S. Vorburger PhD: Conceptualization
Krystal Laing MS: Validation
ISSN:0730-725X
1873-5894
DOI:10.1016/j.mri.2021.10.007