Reliability and validity of DTI-based indirect disconnection measures

Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) Neuro- en revalidatiepsychologie White Matter/diagnostic imaging Neuropsychology and rehabilitation psychology Computer applications to medicine. Medical informatics R858-859.7 Reproducibility of Results Regular Article Disconnection Reliability White Matter Validity Stroke Diffusion Tensor Imaging Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging Diffusion Tensor Imaging/methods Journal Article Humans Neurology. Diseases of the nervous system Prediction RC346-429 Stroke/diagnostic imaging
DOI: 10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103470 Publication Date: 2023-07-11T16:41:54Z
ABSTRACT
White matter connections enable the interaction within and between brain networks. Brain lesions can cause structural disconnections that disrupt networks and thereby cognitive functions supported by them. In recent years, novel methods have been developed to quantify the extent of structural disconnection after focal lesions, using tractography data from healthy controls. These methods, however, are indirect and their reliability and validity have yet to be fully established. In this study, we present our implementation of this approach, in a tool supplemented by uncertainty metrics for the predictions overall and at voxel-level. These metrics give an indication of the reliability and are used to compare predictions with direct measures from patients' diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data in a sample of 95 first-ever stroke patients. Results show that, except for small lesions, the tool can predict fiber loss with high reliability and compares well to direct patient DTI estimates. Clinical utility of the method was demonstrated using lesion data from a subset of patients suffering from hemianopia. Both tract-based measures outperformed lesion localization in mapping visual field defects and showed a network consistent with the known anatomy of the visual system. This study offers an important contribution to the validation of structural disconnection mapping. We show that indirect measures of structural disconnection can be a reliable and valid substitute for direct estimations of fiber loss after focal lesions. Moreover, based on these results, we argue that indirect structural disconnection measures may even be preferable to lower-quality single subject diffusion MRI when based on high-quality healthy control datasets.
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