Abstract

BackgroundExtracellular free water (FW) resulting from white matter degeneration limits the sensitivity of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in predicting Alzheimer's disease (AD).PurposeTo evaluate the sensitivity of FW‐DTI in detecting white matter microstructural changes in AD. To validate the effectiveness of FW‐DTI indices to predict amyloid‐beta (Aβ) positivity in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) subtypes.Study TypeRetrospective.PopulationThirty‐eight Aβ‐negative cognitively healthy (CH) controls (68.74 ± 8.28 years old, 55% female), 15 Aβ‐negative MCI patients (MCI‐n) (68.87 ± 8.83 years old, 60% female), 29 Aβ‐positive MCI patients (MCI‐p) (73.03 ± 7.05 years old, 52% female), and 29 Aβ‐positive AD patients (72.93 ± 9.11 years old, 55% female).Field Strength/Sequence3.0T; DTI, T1‐weighted, T2‐weighted, T2 star‐weighted angiography, and Aβ PET (18F‐florbetaben or 11C‐PIB).AssessmentFW‐corrected and standard diffusion indices were analyzed using trace‐based spatial statistics. Area under the curve (AUC) in distinguishing MCI subtypes were compared using support vector machine (SVM).Statistical TestsChi‐squared test, one‐way analysis of covariance, general linear regression analyses, nonparametric permutation tests, partial Pearson's correlation, receiver operating characteristic curve analysis, and linear SVM. A P value <0.05 was considered statistically significant.ResultsCompared with CH/MCI‐n/MCI‐p, AD showed significant change in tissue compartment indices of FW‐DTI. No difference was found in the FW index among pair‐wise group comparisons (the minimum FWE‐corrected P = 0.114). There was a significant association between FW‐DTI indices and memory and visuospatial function. The SVM classifier with tissue radial diffusivity as an input feature had the best classification performance of MCI subtypes (AUC = 0.91), and the classifying accuracy of FW‐DTI was all over 89.89%.Data ConclusionFW‐DTI indices prove to be potential biomarkers of AD. The classification of MCI subtypes based on SVM and FW‐DTI indices has good accuracy and could help early diagnosis.Evidence Level4Technical EfficacyStage 2

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call