Relating multi-sequence longitudinal intensity profiles and clinical covariates in new multiple sclerosis lesions
Elizabeth M. Sweeney, Russell T. Shinohara, Blake E. Dewey, Matthew K., Schindler, John Muschelli, Daniel S. Reich, Ciprian M. Crainiceanu, Ani, Eloyan

TL;DR
This study analyzes longitudinal MRI data from MS patients to relate lesion evolution to clinical factors and treatments, introducing models that connect MRI intensity profiles with clinical covariates and validating their clinical relevance.
Contribution
It presents a pipeline for extracting multi-sequence MRI profiles and introduces PCA and function-on-scalar regression models linking these profiles to clinical covariates, advancing understanding of lesion dynamics.
Findings
Treatment with disease-modifying therapies and steroids is associated with lesion normalization.
Longitudinal profiles correlate with clinical interventions and lesion boundary proximity.
Clinicians validated the PCA-derived scores as meaningful indicators of lesion progression.
Abstract
Structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can be used to detect lesions in the brains of multiple sclerosis (MS) patients. The formation of these lesions is a complex process involving inflammation, tissue damage, and tissue repair, all of which are visible on MRI. Here we characterize the lesion formation process on longitudinal, multi-sequence structural MRI from 34 MS patients and relate the longitudinal changes we observe within lesions to therapeutic interventions. In this article, we first outline a pipeline to extract voxel level, multi-sequence longitudinal profiles from four MRI sequences within lesion tissue. We then propose two models to relate clinical covariates to the longitudinal profiles. The first model is a principal component analysis (PCA) regression model, which collapses the information from all four profiles into a scalar value. We find that the score on the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMultiple Sclerosis Research Studies · Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Research · Ultrasound Imaging and Elastography
