White matter lesion filling improves the accuracy of cortical thickness measurements in multiple sclerosis patients: a longitudinal study


Previous studies have demonstrated that white matter (WM) lesions bias automated brain tissue classifications and cerebral volume measurements. However, filling WM lesions using the intensity of neighbouring normal-appearing WM has been shown to increase the accuracy of automated volume measurements in the brain.

In the present study, we investigate the influence of WM lesions on cortical thickness (CTh) measures and assessed the impact of lesion filling on both cross-sectional/longitudinal and global/regional measurements of CTh in multiple sclerosis (MS) patients.

Methods:
Fifty MS patients were studied at baseline as well as after three and six years of follow-up. CTh was estimated using a fully automated pipeline (CIVET) on T1-weighted magnetic resonance images data acquired at 1.5 Tesla without (original) and with WM lesion filling (filled).

WM lesions were semi-automatically segmented and then filled with the mean intensity of the neighbouring voxels. For both original and filled T1 images we investigated and compared the main CIVET’s steps: tissue classification, surfaces generation and CTh measurement.

Results:
On the original T1 images, the majority of WM lesion volume (72%) was wrongly classified as gray matter (GM).

After lesion filling the accuracy of WM lesions classification improved significantly (p

The vertex-wise longitudinal analysis performed on the filled T1 images showed an increased number of vertices in the fronto-temporal region with a significantly decrease of CTh over time compared the analysis performed on the original images.

Conclusion:
These results indicate that WM lesions bias the CTh estimation both cross-sectionally as well as longitudinally. The lesion filling approach significantly improved the accuracy of the regional CTh estimation and has an impact also on the global estimation of CTh.

Author: Stefano MagonLaura GaetanoM Mallar ChakravartyJason P LerchYvonne NaegelinChristoph StippichLudwig KapposErnst-Wilhelm RadueTill Sprenger
Credits/Source: BMC Neuroscience 2014, 15:106

Published on: 2014-09-08

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