Multidimensional classification of hippocampal shape features discriminates Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment from normal aging

July 19, 2017 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› NeuroImage

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Authors Emilie Gerardin, GaΓ«l ChΓ©telat, Marie Chupin, RΓ©mi Cuingnet, BΓ©atrice Desgranges, Ho-Sung Kim, Marc Niethammer, Bruno Dubois, StΓ©phane LehΓ©ricy, Line Garnero, Francis Eustache, Olivier Colliot arXiv ID 1707.05961 Category cs.CV: Computer Vision Cross-listed q-bio.NC, stat.ML Citations 423 Venue NeuroImage Last Checked 3 months ago
Abstract
We describe a new method to automatically discriminate between patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) or mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and elderly controls, based on multidimensional classification of hippocampal shape features. This approach uses spherical harmonics (SPHARM) coefficients to model the shape of the hippocampi, which are segmented from magnetic resonance images (MRI) using a fully automatic method that we previously developed. SPHARM coefficients are used as features in a classification procedure based on support vector machines (SVM). The most relevant features for classification are selected using a bagging strategy. We evaluate the accuracy of our method in a group of 23 patients with AD (10 males, 13 females, age $\pm$ standard-deviation (SD) = 73 $\pm$ 6 years, mini-mental score (MMS) = 24.4 $\pm$ 2.8), 23 patients with amnestic MCI (10 males, 13 females, age $\pm$ SD = 74 $\pm$ 8 years, MMS = 27.3 $\pm$ 1.4) and 25 elderly healthy controls (13 males, 12 females, age $\pm$ SD = 64 $\pm$ 8 years), using leave-one-out cross-validation. For AD vs controls, we obtain a correct classification rate of 94%, a sensitivity of 96%, and a specificity of 92%. For MCI vs controls, we obtain a classification rate of 83%, a sensitivity of 83%, and a specificity of 84%. This accuracy is superior to that of hippocampal volumetry and is comparable to recently published SVM-based whole-brain classification methods, which relied on a different strategy. This new method may become a useful tool to assist in the diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease.
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