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MRI-based radiomics signature for identification of invisible basal cisterns changes in tuberculous meningitis: a preliminary multicenter study.

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Abstract

To develop and evaluate a radiomics signature based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from multicenter datasets for identification of invisible basal cisterns changes in tuberculous meningitis (TBM) patients.Our retrospective study enrolled 184 TBM patients and 187 non-TBM controls from 3 Chinese hospitals (training dataset, 158 TBM patients and 159 non-TBM controls; testing dataset, 26 TBM patients and 28 non-TBM controls). nnU-Net was used to segment basal cisterns in fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) images. Subsequently, radiomics features were extracted from segmented basal cisterns in FLAIR and T2-weighted (T2W) images. Feature selection was carried out in three steps. Support vector machine (SVM) and logistic regression (LR) classifiers were applied to construct the radiomics signature to directly identify basal cisterns changes in TBM patients. Finally, the diagnostic performance was evaluated by the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve analysis, calibration curve, and decision curve analysis (DCA).The segmentation model achieved the mean Dice coefficients of 0.920 and 0.727 in the training and testing datasets, respectively. The SVM model with 7 T2WI-based radiomics features achieved best discrimination capability for basal cisterns changes with an AUC of 0.796 (95% CI, 0.744-0.847) in the training dataset, and an AUC of 0.751 (95% CI, 0.617-0.886) with good calibration in the testing dataset. DCA confirmed its clinical usefulness.The T2WI-based radiomics signature combined with deep learning segmentation could provide a fully automatic, non-invasive tool to identify invisible changes of basal cisterns, which has the potential to assist in the diagnosis of TBM.• The T2WI-based radiomics signature was useful for identifying invisible basal cistern changes in TBM. • The nnU-Net model achieved acceptable results for the auto-segmentation of basal cisterns. • Combining radiomics and deep learning segmentation provided an automatic, non-invasive approach to assist in the diagnosis of TBM.© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to European Society of Radiology.

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