Susceptibility-Weighted MRI Combined with AI May Predict Continued Cognitive Decline
By MedImaging International staff writers
Posted on 09 Nov 2010
Using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) technology and an artificial intelligence (AI) technique, Swiss researchers have identified a method that may help identify which individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) will continue to decline.Posted on 09 Nov 2010
The study's findings were published online in October 2010 and in the December 2010 issue of the journal Radiology. "We know that about half of all individuals with early-stage mild cognitive impairment will progress to Alzheimer's disease,” said lead researcher Sven Haller, M.D, M.Sc., a radiologist at University Hospitals of Geneva (Switzerland). "But not knowing which patients will continue to decline makes it difficult to treat Alzheimer's early in the disease process.”
Dr. Haller and a team of researchers used two innovative methods to image the brains of 35 control participants (mean age 63.7) and 69 patients with MCI (mean age 65 years), including 38 women and 31 men. Patients were diagnosed with MCI based on a variety of neuropsychologic tests, which were repeated on 67 of the patients one year later to determine whether their disease was stable (40 patients) or progressive (27 patients).
Using a technique called susceptibility-weighted MRI, the researchers were able to create scans with greater detail of the many blood vessels in the brain, including the presence of tiny leaks called microhemorrhages or microbleeds. "The number of cerebral microbleeds was significantly higher in the individuals with mild cognitive impairment than those in the control group,” Dr. Haller said.
The MRI scans revealed microbleeds in 33% of individuals with stable MCI and 54% of those with progressive MCI. Only 14% of the control participants had microbleeds.
The susceptibility-weighted MRI also revealed that compared to the control participants, individuals with MCI had considerably increased iron concentration in certain areas deep within the structure of the brain and reduced levels of iron in others. "Altered iron distribution in the subcortical nuclei was another distinguishing feature between the healthy control individuals and patients with mild cognitive impairment,” Dr. Haller said.
The investigators also evaluated the MRI data with support vector machines (SVMs), an AI technique that uses algorithms to identify patterns within a group and create classifications. SVM analysis of baseline MRI data acquired at the initial exam distinguished patients with progressive MCI from those with stable MCI with 85% accuracy.
"The goal of my work is to identify biomarkers of mild cognitive impairment that will help us diagnose individual patients at risk for further decline,” Dr. Haller concluded. "Using SVM to analyze iron deposits in the brain may be such a biomarker.”
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University Hospitals of Geneva