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Validation and Optimization of BIANCA for the Segmentation of Extensive White Matter Hyperintensities

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Abstract

White matter hyperintensities (WMH) are a hallmark of small vessel diseases (SVD). Yet, no automated segmentation method is readily and widely used, especially in patients with extensive WMH where lesions are close to the cerebral cortex. BIANCA (Brain Intensity AbNormality Classification Algorithm) is a new fully automated, supervised method for WMH segmentation. In this study, we optimized and compared BIANCA against a reference method with manual editing in a cohort of patients with extensive WMH. This was achieved in two datasets: a clinical protocol with 90 patients having 2-dimensional FLAIR and an advanced protocol with 66 patients having 3-dimensional FLAIR. We first determined simultaneously which input modalities (FLAIR alone or FLAIR + T1) and which training sets were better compared to the reference. Three strategies for the selection of the threshold that is applied to the probabilistic output of BIANCA were then evaluated: chosen at the group level, based on Fazekas score or determined individually. Accuracy of the segmentation was assessed through measures of spatial agreement and volumetric correspondence with respect to reference segmentation. Based on all our tests, we identified multimodal inputs (FLAIR + T1), mixed WMH load training set and individual threshold selection as the best conditions to automatically segment WMH in our cohort. A median Dice similarity index of 0.80 (0.80) and an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.97 (0.98) were obtained for the clinical (advanced) protocol. However, Bland-Altman plots identified a difference with the reference method that was linearly related to the total burden of WMH. Our results suggest that BIANCA is a reliable and fast segmentation method to extract masks of WMH in patients with extensive lesions.

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Fig. 1: Different patterns of WMH in CADASIL and sporadic SVD.
Fig. 2: Overview of the study protocol.
Fig. 3: Examples of BIANCA results for different input modalities: FLAIR alone or FLAIR + T1 in the 2 datasets.
Fig. 4: Box plots of SI for different thresholds for all tests of BIANCA optimization phase I.
Fig. 5: Comparison of BIANCA results and reference segmentation with the best input modality and training set: visualization of true positives, false positives and false negatives.
Fig. 6: Box plots of SI in different WMH load subsets for threshold selection.
Fig. 7: Bland-Altman plots for the different strategies of threshold selection.

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Correspondence to Hugues Chabriat.

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All procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards.

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Ling, Y., Jouvent, E., Cousyn, L. et al. Validation and Optimization of BIANCA for the Segmentation of Extensive White Matter Hyperintensities. Neuroinform 16, 269–281 (2018). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12021-018-9372-2

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