4.7 Article

Prediction of brain maturity in infants using machine-learning algorithms

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 136, Issue -, Pages 1-9

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2016.05.029

Keywords

Developmental neuroimaging; Functional MRI; Infant; Prematurity; Multivariate pattern analysis

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [K02 NS089852, UL1 TR000448, K12 HD076224, K23 NS088590, K23 MH105179, R01 HD05709801, P30 NS048056, P30 HD062171, R01 HD061619]
  2. Child Neurology Foundation
  3. Cerebral Palsy International Research Foundation
  4. Dana Foundation
  5. Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation
  6. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health & Human Development of the National Institutes of Health [U54HD087011]

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Recent resting-state functional MRI investigations have demonstrated that much of the large-scale functional network architecture supporting motor, sensory and cognitive functions in older pediatric and adult populations is present in term-and prematurely-born infants. Application of new analytical approaches can help translate the improved understanding of early functional connectivity provided through these studies into predictive models of neurodevelopmental outcome. One approach to achieving this goal is multivariate pattern analysis, a machine-learning, pattern classification approach well-suited for high-dimensional neuroimaging data. It has previously been adapted to predict brain maturity in children and adolescents using structural and resting state-functional MRI data. In this study, we evaluated resting state-functional MRI data from 50 preterm-born infants (born at 23-29 weeks of gestation and without moderate-severe brain injury) scanned at term equivalent postmenstrual age compared with data from 50 term-born control infants studied within the first week of life. Using 214 regions of interest, binary support vector machines distinguished term from preterm infants with 84% accuracy (p < 0.0001). Inter-and intra-hemispheric connections throughout the brain were important for group categorization, indicating that wide spread changes in the brain's functional network architecture associated with preterm birth are detectable by term equivalent age. Support vector regression enabled quantitative estimation of birth gestational age in single subjects using only term equivalent resting state-functional MRI data, indicating that the present approach is sensitive to the degree of disruption of brain development associated with preterm birth (using gestational age as a surrogate for the extent of disruption). This suggests that support vector regression may provide a means for predicting neurodevelopmental outcome in individual infants. (C) 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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