4.7 Article

Post-mortem CT radiomics for the prediction of time since death

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EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
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DOI: 10.1007/s00330-023-09746-2

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Tomography; spiral computed; Post-mortem examination; Medicine; forensic; Machine learning; Death

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This study aimed to evaluate the use of post-mortem CT (PMCT) radiomics for the differentiation between early and late post-mortem interval (PMI). The results showed that radiomics analysis on PMCT can differentiate early from late PMI, providing a novel image-based method with significant implications in forensic casework.
ObjectivesPost-mortem interval (PMI) estimation has long been relying on sequential post-mortem changes on the body as a function of extrinsic, intrinsic, and environmental factors. Such factors are difficult to account for in complicated death scenes; thus, PMI estimation can be compromised. Herein, we aimed to evaluate the use of post-mortem CT (PMCT) radiomics for the differentiation between early and late PMI.MethodsConsecutive whole-body PMCT examinations performed between 2016 and 2021 were retrospectively included (n = 120), excluding corpses without an accurately reported PMI (n = 23). Radiomics data were extracted from liver and pancreas tissue and randomly split into training and validation sets (70:30%). Following data preprocessing, significant features were selected (Boruta selection) and three XGBoost classifiers were built (liver, pancreas, combined) to differentiate between early (< 12 h) and late (> 12 h) PMI. Classifier performance was assessed with receiver operating characteristics (ROC) curves and areas under the curves (AUC), which were compared by bootstrapping.ResultsA total of 97 PMCTs were included, representing individuals (23 females and 74 males) with a mean age of 47.1 +/- 23.38 years. The combined model achieved the highest AUC reaching 75% (95%CI 58.4-91.6%) (p = 0.03 compared to liver and p = 0.18 compared to pancreas). The liver-based and pancreas-based XGBoost models achieved AUCs of 53.6% (95%CI 34.8-72.3%) and 64.3% (95%CI 46.7-81.9%) respectively (p > 0.05 for the comparison between liver- and pancreas-based models).ConclusionThe use of radiomics analysis on PMCT examinations differentiated early from late PMI, unveiling a novel image-based method with important repercussions in forensic casework.

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