The use of hippocampal volumetric measurements to improve diagnostic accuracy in pediatric patients with mesial temporal sclerosis
Autor: | Michelle M. Miller-Thomas, Spencer McFarlane, Ananth K. Vellimana, Soe Mar, Matthew D. Smyth, Katherine E. Schwetye, Christopher J. Owen, Tammie L.S. Benzinger, Gloria J. Guzmán Pérez-Carrillo, Joshua S. Shimony |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Drug Resistant Epilepsy Adolescent Diagnostic accuracy Hippocampal formation Hippocampus 03 medical and health sciences Young Adult 0302 clinical medicine Quality of life 030225 pediatrics medicine Image Processing Computer-Assisted Humans Epilepsy surgery Child Pathological Retrospective Studies Sclerosis medicine.diagnostic_test business.industry Magnetic resonance imaging General Medicine Organ Size Prognosis Magnetic Resonance Imaging Surgery ROC Curve Area Under Curve Child Preschool Cohort Temporal sclerosis business 030217 neurology & neurosurgery |
Zdroj: | Journal of neurosurgery. Pediatrics. 19(6) |
ISSN: | 1933-0715 |
Popis: | OBJECTIVEMany patients with medically intractable epilepsy have mesial temporal sclerosis (MTS), which significantly affects their quality of life. The surgical excision of MTS lesions can result in marked improvement or even complete resolution of the epileptic episodes. Reliable radiological diagnosis of MTS is a clinical challenge. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the utility of volumetric mapping of the hippocampi for the identification of MTS in a case-controlled series of pediatric patients who underwent resection for medically refractory epilepsy, using pathology as a gold standard.METHODSA cohort of 57 pediatric patients who underwent resection for medically intractable epilepsy between 2005 and 2015 was evaluated. On pathological investigation, this group included 24 patients with MTS and 33 patients with non-MTS findings. Retrospective quantitative volumetric measurements of the hippocampi were acquired for 37 of these 57 patients. Two neuroradiologists with more than 10 years of experience who were blinded to the patients' MTS status performed the retrospective review of MR images. To produce the volumetric data, MR scans were parcellated and segmented using the FreeSurfer software suite. Hippocampal regions of interest were compared against an age-weighted local regression curve generated with data from the pediatric normal cohort. Standard deviations and percentiles of specific subjects were calculated. The sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV) were determined for the original clinical read and the expert readers. Receiver operating characteristic curves were generated for the methods of classification to compare results from the readers with the authors' results, and an optimal threshold was determined. From that threshold the sensitivity, specificity, PPV, and NPV were calculated for the volumetric analysis.RESULTSWith the use of quantitative volumetry, a sensitivity of 72%, a specificity of 95%, a PPV of 93%, an NPV of 78%, and an area under the curve of 0.84 were obtained using a percentage difference of normalized hippocampal volume. The resulting specificity (95%) and PPV (93%) are superior to the original clinical read and to Reader A and Reader B's findings (range for specificity 74%–86% and for PPV 64%–71%). The sensitivity (72%) and NPV (78%) are comparable to Reader A's findings (73% and 81%, respectively) and are better than those of the original clinical read and of Reader B (sensitivity 45% and 63% and NPV 71% and 70%, respectively).CONCLUSIONSVolumetric measurement of the hippocampi outperforms expert readers in specificity and PPV, and it demonstrates comparable to superior sensitivity and NPV. Volumetric measurements can complement anatomical imaging for the identification of MTS, much like a computer-aided detection tool would. The implementation of this approach in the daily clinical workflow could significantly improve diagnostic accuracy. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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