Edinburgh Imaging

15 Aug 18. Featured Paper

Machine learning of neuroimaging for assisted diagnosis of cognitive impairment and dementia: A systematic review.

Link to paper on Science Direct.

 

Authors

Enrico Pellegrini, Lucia BalleriniMaria del C. Valdes HernandezFrancesca M.ChappellVictor González-CastroDevasuda Anblagana, Samuel DansoSusana Muñoz ManiegaDominic JobCyril PernetGrant MairTom MacGillivrayEmanuele Trucco, Joanna Wardlaw

Abstract

Introduction

Advanced machine learning methods might help to identify dementia risk from neuroimaging, but their accuracy to date is unclear.

Methods

We systematically reviewed the literature, 2006 to late 2016, for machine learning studies differentiating healthy aging from aging with dementia of various types, assessing study quality, and comparing accuracy at different disease boundaries.

Results

Of 111 relevant studies, most assessed Alzheimer's disease versus healthy controls, using AD Neuroimaging Initiative data, support vector machines, and only T1-weighted sequences. Accuracy was highest for differentiating Alzheimer's disease from healthy controls and poor for differentiating healthy controls versus mild cognitive impairment versus Alzheimer's disease or mild cognitive impairment converters versus nonconverters. Accuracy increased using combined data types, but not by data source, sample size, or machine learning method.

Discussion

Machine learning does not differentiate clinically relevant disease categories yet. More diverse data sets, combinations of different types of data, and close clinical integration of machine learning would help to advance the field.

Keywords