IVCVLGNov 6, 2024

MINDSETS: Multi-omics Integration with Neuroimaging for Dementia Subtyping and Effective Temporal Study

arXiv:2411.04155v112 citationsh-index: 3Sci Rep
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the critical need for timely, distinct treatment approaches for dementia patients, though it appears incremental as an integration of existing data types.

This paper tackles the problem of early, accurate differentiation between Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia by developing a multi-omics approach that integrates radiomics features from MRI scans with clinical, cognitive, and genetic data, achieving 89.25% diagnostic accuracy.

In the complex realm of cognitive disorders, Alzheimer's disease (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD) are the two most prevalent dementia types, presenting entangled symptoms yet requiring distinct treatment approaches. The crux of effective treatment in slowing neurodegeneration lies in early, accurate diagnosis, as this significantly assists doctors in determining the appropriate course of action. However, current diagnostic practices often delay VaD diagnosis, impeding timely intervention and adversely affecting patient prognosis. This paper presents an innovative multi-omics approach to accurately differentiate AD from VaD, achieving a diagnostic accuracy of 89.25%. The proposed method segments the longitudinal MRI scans and extracts advanced radiomics features. Subsequently, it synergistically integrates the radiomics features with an ensemble of clinical, cognitive, and genetic data to provide state-of-the-art diagnostic accuracy, setting a new benchmark in classification accuracy on a large public dataset. The paper's primary contribution is proposing a comprehensive methodology utilizing multi-omics data to provide a nuanced understanding of dementia subtypes. Additionally, the paper introduces an interpretable model to enhance clinical decision-making coupled with a novel model architecture for evaluating treatment efficacy. These advancements lay the groundwork for future work not only aimed at improving differential diagnosis but also mitigating and preventing the progression of dementia.

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