Research Article
The effect of hypointense white matter lesions on automated gray matter segmentation in multiple sclerosis
Article first published online: 5 OCT 2011
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.21402
Copyright © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Additional Information
How to Cite
Gelineau-Morel, R., Tomassini, V., Jenkinson, M., Johansen-Berg, H., Matthews, P. M. and Palace, J. (2012), The effect of hypointense white matter lesions on automated gray matter segmentation in multiple sclerosis. Hum. Brain Mapp., 33: 2802–2814. doi: 10.1002/hbm.21402
Publication History
- Issue published online: 7 NOV 2012
- Article first published online: 5 OCT 2011
- Manuscript Accepted: 9 JUN 2011
- Manuscript Revised: 28 APR 2011
- Manuscript Received: 14 DEC 2010
Funded by
- Multiple Sclerosis Society UK. Grant Number: 829/05
- MS Society Italy (V.T.'s Multiple Sclerosis Society Fellowship 2005-2006)
- UK NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre
Keywords:
- MRI;
- multiple sclerosis;
- white matter lesions;
- gray matter segmentation;
- lesion-filling;
- brain atrophy
Abstract
Previous imaging studies assessing the relationship between white matter (WM) damage and matter (GM) atrophy have raised the concern that Multiple Sclerosis (MS) WM lesions may affect measures of GM volume by inducing voxel misclassification during intensity-based tissue segmentation. Here, we quantified this misclassification error in simulated and real MS brains using a lesion-filling method. Using this method, we also corrected GM measures in patients before comparing them with controls in order to assess the impact of this lesion-induced misclassification error in clinical studies. We found that higher WM lesion volumes artificially reduced total GM volumes. In patients, this effect was about 72% of that predicted by simulation. Misclassified voxels were located at the GM/WM border and could be distant from lesions. Volume of individual deep gray matter (DGM) structures generally decreased with higher lesion volumes, consistent with results from total GM. While preserving differences in GM volumes between patients and controls, lesion-filling correction revealed more lateralised DGM shape changes in patients, which were not evident with the original images. Our results confirm that WM lesions can influence MRI measures of GM volume and shape in MS patients through their effect on intensity-based GM segmentation. The greater effect of lesions at increasing levels of damage supports the use of lesion-filling to correct for this problem and improve the interpretability of the results. Volumetric or morphometric imaging studies, where lesion amount and characteristics may vary between groups of patients or change over time, may especially benefit from this correction. Hum Brain Mapp, 2012. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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