4.7 Article

Detection of Alzheimer's Disease Signature in MR Images Seven Years Before Conversion to Dementia: Toward an Early Individual Prognosis

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 36, Issue 12, Pages 4758-4770

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.22926

Keywords

hippocampus; Alzheimer; MRI biomarker

Funding

  1. ANR [2007LVIE 003]
  2. National Institutes of Health [Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI)] [U01 AG024904]
  3. NIH [P30AG010129, K01 AG030514]
  4. Fondation Plan Alzheimer
  5. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale
  6. Dana Foundation
  7. Northern California Institute for Research and Education

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Finding very early biomarkers of Alzheimer's Disease (AD) to aid in individual prognosis is of major interest to accelerate the development of new therapies. Among the potential biomarkers, neurodegeneration measurements from MRI are considered as good candidates but have so far not been effective at the early stages of the pathology. Our objective is to investigate the efficiency of a new MR-based hippocampal grading score to detect incident dementia in cognitively intact patients. This new score is based on a pattern recognition strategy, providing a grading measure that reflects the similarity of the anatomical patterns of the subject under study with dataset composed of healthy subjects and patients with AD. Hippocampal grading was evaluated on subjects from the Three-City cohort, with a followup period of 12 years. Experiments demonstrate that hippocampal grading yields prediction accuracy up to 72.5% (P<0.0001) 7 years before conversion to AD, better than both hippocampal volume (58.1%, P=0.04) and MMSE score (56.9%, P=0.08). The area under the ROC curve (AUC) supports the efficiency of imaging biomarkers with a gain of 8.4 percentage points for hippocampal grade (73.0%) over hippocampal volume (64.6%). Adaptation of the proposed framework to clinical score estimation is also presented. Compared with previous studies investigating new biomarkers for AD prediction over much shorter periods, the very long followup of the Three-City cohort demonstrates the important clinical potential of the proposed imaging biomarker. The high accuracy obtained with this new imaging biomarker paves the way for computer-based prognostic aides to help the clinician identify cognitively intact subjects that are at high risk to develop AD. (C) 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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