MRI-Based Prediction of Clinical Improvement after Ventricular Shunt Placement for Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus: Development and Evaluation of an Integrated Multisequence Machine Learning Algorithm
- PMID: 38866432
- PMCID: PMC11448992
- DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A8372
MRI-Based Prediction of Clinical Improvement after Ventricular Shunt Placement for Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus: Development and Evaluation of an Integrated Multisequence Machine Learning Algorithm
Abstract
Background and purpose: Symptoms of normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) are sometimes refractory to shunt placement, with limited ability to predict improvement for individual patients. We evaluated an MRI-based artificial intelligence method to predict postshunt NPH symptom improvement.
Materials and methods: Patients with NPH who underwent MRI before shunt placement at a single center (2014-2021) were identified. Twelve-month postshunt improvement in mRS, incontinence, gait, and cognition were retrospectively abstracted from clinical documentation. 3D deep residual neural networks were built on skull-stripped T2-weighted and FLAIR images. Predictions based on both sequences were fused by additional network layers. Patients from 2014-2019 were used for parameter optimization, while those from 2020-2021 were used for testing. Models were validated on an external validation data set from a second institution (n = 33).
Results: Of 249 patients, n = 201 and n = 185 were included in the T2-based and FLAIR-based models according to imaging availability. The combination of T2-weighted and FLAIR sequences offered the best performance in mRS and gait improvement predictions relative to models trained on imaging acquired by using only 1 sequence, with area under the receiver operating characteristic (AUROC) values of 0.7395 [0.5765-0.9024] for mRS and 0.8816 [0.8030-0.9602] for gait. For urinary incontinence and cognition, combined model performances on predicting outcomes were similar to FLAIR-only performance, with AUROC values of 0.7874 [0.6845-0.8903] and 0.7230 [0.5600-0.8859].
Conclusions: Application of a combined algorithm by using both T2-weighted and FLAIR sequences offered the best image-based prediction of postshunt symptom improvement, particularly for gait and overall function in terms of mRS.
© 2024 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.
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