Correlation Between Cognitive Impairment and Lenticulostriate Arteries: A Clinical and Radiomics Analysis.
Langtao ZhouHuiting WuHong ZhouPublished in: Journal of imaging informatics in medicine (2024)
Lenticulostriate arteries (LSA) are potentially valuable for studying vascular cognitive impairment. This study aims to investigate correlations between cognitive impairment and LSA through clinical and radiomics features analysis. We retrospectively included 102 patients (mean age 62.5±10.3 years, 60 males), including 58 with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and 44 with moderate or severe cognitive impairment (MSCI). The MRI images of these patients were subjected to z-score preprocessing, manual regions of interest (ROI) outlining, feature extraction (pyradiomics), feature selection [max-relevance and min-redundancy (mRMR), least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO), and univariate analysis], model construction (multivariate logistic regression), and evaluation [receiver operating characteristic curve (ROC), decision curve analysis (DCA), and calibration curves (CC)]. In the training dataset (71 patients, 44 MCI) and the test dataset (31 patients, 17 MCI), the area under curve (AUC) of the combined model (training 0.88 [95% CI 0.78, 0.97], test 0.76 [95% CI 0.6, 0.93]) was better than that of the clinical model and the radiomics model. The DCA results demonstrated the highest net yield of the combined model relative to the clinical and radiomics models. In addition, we found that LSA total vessel count (0.79 [95% CI 0.08, 1.59], P = 0.038) and wavelet.HLH_glcm_MCC (-1.2 [95% CI -2.2, -0.4], P = 0.008) were independent predictors of MCI. The model that combines clinical and radiomics features of LSA can predict MCI. Besides, LSA vascular parameters may serve as imaging biomarkers of cognitive impairment.
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