混杂因素调整的基于mri的多发性硬化症残疾预测因子。

Yujin Kim, Mihael Varosanec, Peter Kosa, Bibiana Bielekova
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引用次数: 1

摘要

衰老和多发性硬化症(MS)都会导致中枢神经系统(CNS)萎缩。多发性硬化症的过度脑萎缩被解释为“加速衰老”。本文验证了另一种假说:多发性硬化症引起中枢神经系统萎缩的机制不同于生理性衰老。因此,减去生理混杂因素对中枢神经系统结构的影响将分离ms特异性效应。方法:在ClinicalTrials.gov注册的646名参与者中前瞻性地获得标准化脑MRI和神经学检查。采用自动病变-蟾蜍算法和脊髓工具箱,采用盲法回顾性测量中枢神经系统体积。在80名健康志愿者中发现的生理混杂因素通过逐步多元线性回归进行回归。在非MS队列(n = 158)中评估经混杂因素调整的MRI特征的MS特异性。MS患者随机分为训练组(n = 277)和验证组(n = 131)。梯度增强机(GBM)模型在MS训练队列中根据四种残疾量表从未调整和混杂调整的中枢神经系统体积生成。结果:混杂因素调整突出了ms特异性的中枢神经系统白质进行性损失。从训练到交叉验证,再到独立验证队列,GBM模型的性能显著下降,但所有模型预测认知和身体残疾的p值和效应量都较低,优于基于最近荟萃分析的已发表文献。在验证队列中,由混杂因素调整的MRI预测因子构建的模型优于未经调整的预测因子构建的模型。结论:经混杂因素调整的体积MRI模型反映了MS特异性中枢神经系统损伤,与脑萎缩相比,这些模型与临床结果的相关性更强,值得在未来的MS临床试验中探索。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Confounder-adjusted MRI-based predictors of multiple sclerosis disability.

Confounder-adjusted MRI-based predictors of multiple sclerosis disability.

Confounder-adjusted MRI-based predictors of multiple sclerosis disability.

Confounder-adjusted MRI-based predictors of multiple sclerosis disability.

Introduction: Both aging and multiple sclerosis (MS) cause central nervous system (CNS) atrophy. Excess brain atrophy in MS has been interpreted as "accelerated aging." Current paper tests an alternative hypothesis: MS causes CNS atrophy by mechanism(s) different from physiological aging. Thus, subtracting effects of physiological confounders on CNS structures would isolate MS-specific effects.

Methods: Standardized brain MRI and neurological examination were acquired prospectively in 646 participants enrolled in ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT00794352 protocol. CNS volumes were measured retrospectively, by automated Lesion-TOADS algorithm and by Spinal Cord Toolbox, in a blinded fashion. Physiological confounders identified in 80 healthy volunteers were regressed out by stepwise multiple linear regression. MS specificity of confounder-adjusted MRI features was assessed in non-MS cohort (n = 158). MS patients were randomly split into training (n = 277) and validation (n = 131) cohorts. Gradient boosting machine (GBM) models were generated in MS training cohort from unadjusted and confounder-adjusted CNS volumes against four disability scales.

Results: Confounder adjustment highlighted MS-specific progressive loss of CNS white matter. GBM model performance decreased substantially from training to cross-validation, to independent validation cohorts, but all models predicted cognitive and physical disability with low p-values and effect sizes that outperform published literature based on recent meta-analysis. Models built from confounder-adjusted MRI predictors outperformed models from unadjusted predictors in the validation cohort.

Conclusion: GBM models from confounder-adjusted volumetric MRI features reflect MS-specific CNS injury, and due to stronger correlation with clinical outcomes compared to brain atrophy these models should be explored in future MS clinical trials.

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