Literature DB >> 16642460

Optimal classification of long echo time in vivo magnetic resonance spectra in the detection of recurrent brain tumors.

B H Menze1, M P Lichy, P Bachert, B M Kelm, H-P Schlemmer, F A Hamprecht.   

Abstract

We describe the optimal high-level postprocessing of single-voxel (1)H magnetic resonance spectra and assess the benefits and limitations of automated methods as diagnostic aids in the detection of recurrent brain tumor. In a previous clinical study, 90 long-echo-time single-voxel spectra were obtained from 52 patients and classified during follow-up (30/28/32 normal/non-progressive tumor/tumor). Based on these data, a large number of evaluation strategies, including both standard resonance line quantification and algorithms from pattern recognition and machine learning, were compared in a quantitative evaluation. Results from linear and non-linear feature extraction, including ICA, PCA and wavelet transformations, and also the data from resonance line quantification were combined systematically with different classifiers such as LDA, chemometric methods (PLS, PCR), support vector machines and ensemble methods. Classification accuracy was assessed using a leave-one-out cross-validation scheme and the area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver operator characteristic (ROC). A regularized linear regression on spectra with binned channels reached 91% classification accuracy compared with 83% from quantification. Interpreting the loadings of these regressions, we find that lipid and lactate signals are too unreliable to be used in a simple machine rule. Choline and NAA are the main source of relevant information. Overall, we find that fully automated pattern recognition algorithms perform as well as, or slightly better than, a manually controlled and optimized resonance line quantification.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2006        PMID: 16642460     DOI: 10.1002/nbm.1041

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  NMR Biomed        ISSN: 0952-3480            Impact factor:   4.044


  4 in total

1.  Analyzing magnetic resonance imaging data from glioma patients using deep learning.

Authors:  Bjoern Menze; Fabian Isensee; Roland Wiest; Bene Wiestler; Klaus Maier-Hein; Mauricio Reyes; Spyridon Bakas
Journal:  Comput Med Imaging Graph       Date:  2020-12-02       Impact factor: 4.790

2.  Identifying malignant transformations in recurrent low grade gliomas using high resolution magic angle spinning spectroscopy.

Authors:  Alexandra Constantin; Adam Elkhaled; Llewellyn Jalbert; Radhika Srinivasan; Soonmee Cha; Susan M Chang; Ruzena Bajcsy; Sarah J Nelson
Journal:  Artif Intell Med       Date:  2012-03-03       Impact factor: 5.326

3.  A comparison of random forest and its Gini importance with standard chemometric methods for the feature selection and classification of spectral data.

Authors:  Bjoern H Menze; B Michael Kelm; Ralf Masuch; Uwe Himmelreich; Peter Bachert; Wolfgang Petrich; Fred A Hamprecht
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2009-07-10       Impact factor: 3.169

4.  Multiproject-multicenter evaluation of automatic brain tumor classification by magnetic resonance spectroscopy.

Authors:  Juan M García-Gómez; Jan Luts; Margarida Julià-Sapé; Patrick Krooshof; Salvador Tortajada; Javier Vicente Robledo; Willem Melssen; Elies Fuster-García; Iván Olier; Geert Postma; Daniel Monleón; Angel Moreno-Torres; Jesús Pujol; Ana-Paula Candiota; M Carmen Martínez-Bisbal; Johan Suykens; Lutgarde Buydens; Bernardo Celda; Sabine Van Huffel; Carles Arús; Montserrat Robles
Journal:  MAGMA       Date:  2008-11-07       Impact factor: 2.310

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.