Interexaminer difference in infarct volume measurements on MRI - A source of variance in stroke research

被引:50
作者
Ay, Hakan [1 ,2 ]
Arsava, E. Murat [2 ]
Vangel, Mark [2 ]
Oner, Banu [2 ]
Zhu, Mingwang [2 ]
Wu, Ona [2 ]
Singhal, Aneesh
Koroshetz, Walter J. [3 ]
Sorensen, A. Gregory [2 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Univ, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Sch Med, Dept Neurol,Stroke Serv, Boston, MA USA
[2] Harvard Univ, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Sch Med, AA Martinos Ctr Biomed Imaging,Dept Radiol, Boston, MA USA
[3] Natl Inst Neurol Disorders & Stroke, NIH, Bethesda, MD USA
关键词
acute stroke; diffusion-weighted imaging; MRI; neuroradiology;
D O I
10.1161/STROKEAHA.107.502104
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background and Purpose - The measurement of ischemic lesion volume on diffusion- (DWI) and perfusion-weighted MRI (PWI) is examiner dependent. We sought to quantify the variance imposed by measurement error in DWI and PWI lesion volume measurements in ischemic stroke. Methods - Fifty-eight consecutive patients with DWI and PWI within 12 hours of symptom onset and follow-up MRI on >= day-5 were studied. Two radiologists blinded to each other measured lesion volumes by manual outlining on each image. Interexaminer reliability was evaluated by intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC) and relative paired difference or RPD (ratio of difference between 2 measurements to their mean). The ratio of between-examiner variability to between-subject variability (variance ratio) was calculated for each imaging parameter. Results - The correlation (ICC) between examiners ranged from 0.93 to 0.99. The median RPD was 10.0% for DWI, 14.1% for mean transit time, 18.9% for cerebral blood flow, 21.0% for cerebral blood volume, 16.8% for DWI/MTT mismatch, and 6.3% for chronic T2-weighted images. There was negative correlation between RPD and lesion volume in all but chronic T2-weighted images. The variance ratio ranged between 0.02 and 0.10. Conclusion - Despite high correlation between volume measurements of abnormal regions on DWI and PWI by different examiners, substantial differences in individual measurements can still occur. The magnitude of variance from measurement error is primarily determined by the type of imaging and lesion volume. Minimizing this source of variance will better enable imaging to deliver on its promise of smaller sample size.
引用
收藏
页码:1171 / 1176
页数:6
相关论文
共 30 条
[1]   Interobserver agreement in the classification of stroke in the Women's Health Study [J].
Atiya, M ;
Kurth, T ;
Berger, K ;
Buring, JE ;
Kase, CS .
STROKE, 2003, 34 (02) :565-567
[2]   Conversion of ischemic brain tissue into infarction increases with age [J].
Ay, H ;
Koroshetz, WJ ;
Vangel, M ;
Benner, T ;
Melinosky, C ;
Zhu, MW ;
Menezes, N ;
Lopez, CJ ;
Sorensen, AG .
STROKE, 2005, 36 (12) :2632-2636
[3]   An evidence-based causative classification system for acute ischemic stroke [J].
Ay, H ;
Furie, KL ;
Singhal, A ;
Smith, WS ;
Sorensen, AG ;
Koroshetz, WJ .
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 2005, 58 (05) :688-697
[4]   STATISTICAL METHODS FOR ASSESSING AGREEMENT BETWEEN TWO METHODS OF CLINICAL MEASUREMENT [J].
BLAND, JM ;
ALTMAN, DG .
LANCET, 1986, 1 (8476) :307-310
[5]   Reliability of assessing percentage of diffusion-perfusion mismatch [J].
Coutts, SB ;
Simon, JE ;
Tomanek, AI ;
Barber, PA ;
Chan, J ;
Hudon, ME ;
Mitchell, JR ;
Frayne, R ;
Eliasziw, M ;
Buchan, AM ;
Demchuk, AM .
STROKE, 2003, 34 (07) :1681-1683
[6]   Proof-of-principle phase II MRI studies in stroke -: Sample size estimates from dichotomous and continuous data [J].
Donnan, Geoffrey A. ;
Davis, Stephen M. ;
Phan, Thanh G. ;
Ludbrook, John ;
Byrnes, Graham ;
Parsons, Mark ;
Barber, Alan P. ;
Reutens, David C. ;
Rose, Stephen E. ;
Chalk, Jonathan ;
Demchuk, Andrew M. ;
Coutts, Shelagh B. ;
Simon, Jessica E. ;
Tomanek, Anna ;
Roether, Joachim ;
Weiller, Comelius ;
Fiehler, Jens ;
Thomalla, Gotz ;
Kucinski, Thomas ;
Schellinger, Peter D. ;
Hacke, Werner ;
Gass, Achim ;
Szabo, Kristina ;
Hennerici, Michael ;
Siebler, Mario ;
Villringer, Arno ;
Junge-Huelsing, G. J. ;
Pedraza, Salvador ;
Davalos, Antoni ;
Castillo, Jose ;
Albers, Gregory W. ;
Lansberg, Maarten G. ;
Thijs, Vincent N. ;
Bammer, Roland ;
Moseley, Michael E. ;
Marks, Michael ;
Warach, Steve ;
Baird, Alison ;
Kidwell, Chelsea ;
Saver, Jeff ;
Sorensen, Greg ;
Fisher, Marc ;
Nighoghossian, Norbert ;
Muir, Keith .
STROKE, 2006, 37 (10) :2521-2525
[7]   Usefulness of magnetic resonance-derived quantitative measurements of cerebral blood flow and volume in prediction of infarct growth in hyperacute stroke [J].
Grandin, CB ;
Duprez, TP ;
Smith, AM ;
Mataigne, F ;
Peeters, A ;
Oppenheim, C ;
Cosnard, G .
STROKE, 2001, 32 (05) :1147-1153
[8]   A pilot randomized trial of induced blood pressure elevation: Effects on function and focal perfusion in acute and subacute stroke [J].
Hillis, AE ;
Ulatowski, JA ;
Barker, PB ;
Torbey, M ;
Ziai, W ;
Beauchamp, NJ ;
Oh, S ;
Wityk, RJ .
CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASES, 2003, 16 (03) :236-246
[9]   Improved optimization for the robust and accurate linear registration and motion correction of brain images [J].
Jenkinson, M ;
Bannister, P ;
Brady, M ;
Smith, S .
NEUROIMAGE, 2002, 17 (02) :825-841
[10]   Reliability and validity of estimating the NIH Stroke Scale score from medical records [J].
Kasner, SE ;
Chalela, JA ;
Luciano, JM ;
Cucchiara, BL ;
Raps, EC ;
McGarvey, ML ;
Conroy, MB ;
Localio, AR .
STROKE, 1999, 30 (08) :1534-1537