IVCVJul 15, 2019

Multi-scale Graph-based Grading for Alzheimer's Disease Prediction

arXiv:1907.06625v144 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the clinical problem of early AD prediction for patients and clinicians, but it is incremental as it builds on existing methods with competitive results.

The paper tackled predicting which patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) will progress to Alzheimer's disease (AD) by developing a new MRI-based biomarker, achieving an AUC of 81% and 85% when combined with cognitive scores.

The prediction of subjects with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) who will progress to Alzheimer's disease (AD) is clinically relevant, and may above all have a significant impact on accelerate the development of new treatments. In this paper, we present a new MRI-based biomarker that enables us to predict conversion of MCI subjects to AD accurately. In order to better capture the AD signature, we introduce two main contributions. First, we present a new graph-based grading framework to combine inter-subject similarity features and intra-subject variability features. This framework involves patch-based grading of anatomical structures and graph-based modeling of structure alteration relationships. Second, we propose an innovative multiscale brain analysis to capture alterations caused by AD at different anatomical levels. Based on a cascade of classifiers, this multiscale approach enables the analysis of alterations of whole brain structures and hippocampus subfields at the same time. During our experiments using the ADNI-1 dataset, the proposed multiscale graph-based grading method obtained an area under the curve (AUC) of 81% to predict conversion of MCI subjects to AD within three years. Moreover, when combined with cognitive scores, the proposed method obtained 85% of AUC. These results are competitive in comparison to state-of-the-art methods evaluated on the same dataset.

Foundations

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