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- Title
Posterior circulation ischemic stroke: radiomics-based machine learning approach to identify onset time from magnetic resonance imaging.
- Authors
Liu, Zhenhao; Zhang, Shiyu; Wang, Yuxin; Xu, Hui; Gao, Yongqiang; Jin, Hong; Zhang, Yufeng; Wu, Hongyang; Lu, Jun; Chen, Peipei; Qiao, Peng-Gang; Yang, Zhenghan
- Abstract
Purpose: Posterior circulation ischemic stroke (PCIS) possesses unique features. However, previous studies have primarily or exclusively relied on anterior circulation stroke cases to build machine learning (ML) models for predicting onset time. To date, there is no research reporting the effectiveness and stability of ML in identifying PCIS onset time. We aimed to build diffusion-weighted imaging-based ML models to identify the onset time of PCIS patients. Methods: Consecutive PCIS patients within 24 h of definite symptom onset were included (112 in the training set and 49 in the independent test set). Images were processed as follows: volume of interest segmentation, image feature extraction, and feature selection. Five ML models, naïve Bayes, logistic regression, tree ensemble, k-nearest neighbor, and random forest, were built based on the training set to estimate the stroke onset time (binary classification: ≤ 4.5 h or > 4.5 h). Relative standard deviations (RSD), receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves, and the calibration plot was performed to evaluate the stability and performance of the five models. Results: The random forest model had the best performance in the test set, with the highest area under the curve (AUC, 0.840; 95% CI: 0.706, 0.974). This model also achieved the highest accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value (83.7%, 64.3%, 91.4%, 75.0%, and 86.5%, respectively). Furthermore, the model had high stability (RSD = 0.0094). Conclusion: The PCIS case-based ML model was effective for estimating the symptom onset time and achieved considerably high specificity and stability.
- Subjects
RANDOM forest algorithms; STATISTICAL models; PREDICTIVE tests; PREDICTION models; RECEIVER operating characteristic curves; T-test (Statistics); RESEARCH funding; LOGISTIC regression analysis; RESEARCH evaluation; MAGNETIC resonance imaging; DESCRIPTIVE statistics; MANN Whitney U Test; ISCHEMIC stroke; STATISTICAL reliability; CEREBRAL circulation; CONFIDENCE intervals; DATA analysis software; TIME; SENSITIVITY &; specificity (Statistics)
- Publication
Neuroradiology, 2024, Vol 66, Issue 7, p1141
- ISSN
0028-3940
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1007/s00234-024-03353-8