4.7 Review

Myelin quantification with MRI: A systematic review of accuracy and reproducibility

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 226, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117561

Keywords

Myelin sheath; Magnetic resonance imaging; Multiple sclerosis; Demyelinating diseases; Neurodegenerative diseases

Funding

  1. Nederlandse organisatie voor gezondheidsonderzoek en zorginnovatie (ZonMW)
  2. Stichting MS research [PTO-95105010]

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This systematic review examines the performance of MRI methods for myelin quantification, showing a fairly good correlation with histology and good reproducibility. However, due to limited validation data and variability in performance between studies, the optimal MRI method for myelin quantification has yet to be determined.
Objectives: Currently, multiple sclerosis is treated with anti-inflammatory therapies, but these treatments lack efficacy in progressive disease. New treatment strategies aim to repair myelin damage and efficacy evaluation of such new therapies would benefit from validated myelin imaging techniques. Several MRI methods for quantification of myelin density are available now. This systematic review aims to analyse the performance of these MRI methods. Methods: Studies comparing myelin quantification by MRI with histology, the current gold standard, or assessing reproducibility were retrieved from PubMed/MEDLINE and Embase (until December 2019). Included studies assessed both myelin histology and MRI quantitatively. Correlation or variance measurements were extracted from the studies. Non-parametric tests were used to analyse differences in study methodologies. Results: The search yielded 1348 unique articles. Twenty-two animal studies and 13 human studies correlated myelin MRI with histology. Eighteen clinical studies analysed the reproducibility. Overall bias risk was low or unclear. All MRI methods performed comparably, with a mean correlation between MRI and histology of R-2 = 0.54 (SD = 0.30) for animal studies, and R-2 = 0.54 (SD = 0.18) for human studies. Reproducibility for the MRI methods was good (ICC = 0.75-0.93, R-2 = 0.90-0.98, COV = 1.3-27%), except for MTR (ICC= 0.05-0.51). Conclusions: Overall, MRI-based myelin imaging methods show a fairly good correlation with histology and a good reproducibility. However, the amount of validation data is too limited and the variability in performance between studies is too large to select the optimal MRI method for myelin quantification yet.

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