Abstract

Objectives: To investigate the relationship between imaging features derived from lesion loads and 3 month clinical assessments in ischemic stroke patients. To support clinically implementable predictive modeling with information from lesion-load features.Methods: A retrospective cohort of ischemic stroke patients was studied. The dataset was dichotomized based on revascularization treatment outcome (TICI score). Three lesion delineations were derived from magnetic resonance imaging in each group: two clinically implementable (threshold based and fully automatic prediction) and 90-day follow-up as final groundtruth. Lesion load imaging features were created through overlay of the lesion delineations on a histological brain atlas, and were correlated with the clinical assessment (NIHSS). Significance of the correlations was assessed by constructing confidence intervals using bootstrap sampling.Results: Overall, high correlations between lesion loads and clinical score were observed (up to 0.859). Delineations derived from acute imaging yielded on average somewhat lower correlations than delineations derived from 90-day follow-up imaging. Correlations suggest that both total lesion volume and corticospinal tract lesion load are associated with functional outcome, and in addition highlight other potential areas associated with poor clinical outcome, including the primary somatosensory cortex BA3a. Fully automatic prediction was comparable to ADC threshold-based delineation on the successfully treated cohort and superior to the Tmax threshold-based delineation in the unsuccessfully treated cohort.Conclusions: The confirmation of established predictors for stroke outcome (e.g., corticospinal tract integrity and total lesion volume) gives support to the proposed methodology—relating acute lesion loads to 3 month outcome assessments by way of correlation. Furthermore, the preliminary results indicate an association of further brain regions and structures with three month NIHSS outcome assessments. Hence, prediction models might observe an increased accuracy when incorporating regional (instead of global) lesion loads. Also, the results lend support to the clinical utilization of the automatically predicted volumes from FASTER, rather than the simpler DWI and PWI lesion delineations.

Highlights

  • In 2013, 18.3 million ischemic stroke survivors were reported world-wide

  • This paper investigates lesion-load features based on three different lesion delineations to demonstrate the plausibility of automatically linking lesion loads to clinical outcome

  • The study is based on data from the Bernese stroke registry, a prospectively collected database approved by the Kantonale Ethikkomission Bern, some aspects of which have been reported previously [20,21,22,23]

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Summary

Introduction

In 2013, 18.3 million ischemic stroke survivors were reported world-wide. The incidence of ischemic stroke in the same year was stated to be 6.9 million and the disease claimed 3.3 million lives worldwide [1]. An accurate assessment of likely neurological deficits after an acute stroke is important for various reasons, including setting attainable treatment goals, correctly and accurately informing patients and relatives, planning facility discharge, and assessing impact on daily living [3]. If this assessment is available at the acute stage, it may be possible to better stratify patients who are eligible for mechanical thrombectomy. DWI lesion volume is an independent predictor of Barthel Index (BI) quantified outcome [12] and the power of prediction models may be increased by incorporating it as a feature [13]

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