Abstract

ObjectivesHippocampal sclerosis (HS) is a common cause of temporal lobe epilepsy. Neuroradiological practice relies on visual assessment, but quantification of HS imaging biomarkers—hippocampal volume loss and T2 elevation—could improve detection. We tested whether quantitative measures, contextualised with normative data, improve rater accuracy and confidence.MethodsQuantitative reports (QReports) were generated for 43 individuals with epilepsy (mean age ± SD 40.0 ± 14.8 years, 22 men; 15 histologically unilateral HS; 5 bilateral; 23 MR-negative). Normative data was generated from 111 healthy individuals (age 40.0 ± 12.8 years, 52 men). Nine raters with different experience (neuroradiologists, trainees, and image analysts) assessed subjects’ imaging with and without QReports. Raters assigned imaging normal, right, left, or bilateral HS. Confidence was rated on a 5-point scale.ResultsCorrect designation (normal/abnormal) was high and showed further trend-level improvement with QReports, from 87.5 to 92.5% (p = 0.07, effect size d = 0.69). Largest magnitude improvement (84.5 to 93.8%) was for image analysts (d = 0.87). For bilateral HS, QReports significantly improved overall accuracy, from 74.4 to 91.1% (p = 0.042, d = 0.7). Agreement with the correct diagnosis (kappa) tended to increase from 0.74 (‘fair’) to 0.86 (‘excellent’) with the report (p = 0.06, d = 0.81). Confidence increased when correctly assessing scans with the QReport (p < 0.001, η2p = 0.945).ConclusionsQReports of HS imaging biomarkers can improve rater accuracy and confidence, particularly in challenging bilateral cases. Improvements were seen across all raters, with large effect sizes, greatest for image analysts. These findings may have positive implications for clinical radiology services and justify further validation in larger groups.Key Points• Quantification of imaging biomarkers for hippocampal sclerosis—volume loss and raised T2 signal—could improve clinical radiological detection in challenging cases.• Quantitative reports for individual patients, contextualised with normative reference data, improved diagnostic accuracy and confidence in a group of nine raters, in particular for bilateral HS cases.• We present a pre-use clinical validation of an automated imaging assessment tool to assist clinical radiology reporting of hippocampal sclerosis, which improves detection accuracy.

Highlights

  • Hippocampal sclerosis (HS) is the most common cause of temporal lobe epilepsy worldwide [1] and can be effectively treated with surgical excision of the epileptogenic focus [2]

  • Improvements were seen across all raters, with large effect sizes, greatest for image analysts

  • We present a pre-use clinical validation of an automated imaging assessment tool to assist clinical radiology reporting of hippocampal sclerosis, which improves detection accuracy

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Summary

Introduction

Hippocampal sclerosis (HS) is the most common cause of temporal lobe epilepsy worldwide [1] and can be effectively treated with surgical excision of the epileptogenic focus [2]. The hallmark pathological features of HS are neuronal loss and gliosis [3], which are characterised on MRI as hippocampal atrophy and T2 signal hyperintensity [4,5,6]. These qualitative imaging features are used in combination with other clinical data to decide whether surgery is recommended, indicating the central role of imaging in the decision-making process. A previous inter-rater agreement study demonstrated a threshold effect at which hippocampal volume difference was only visually detected at a volume asymmetry ratio of 0.7 or lower, meaning many subtle pathological changes could be missed [9]. Quantification of hippocampal volume and signal intensity [12] as an adjunctive tool to visual assessment has the potential of improving detection accuracy and reducing inter-rater variability

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