Clinicians and researchers alike are in need of quantitative and robust measurement tools to assess medial temporal lobe atrophy (MTA) due to Alzheimer's disease (AD). We recently proposed a morphological metric, extracted from T1-weighted magnetic resonance images (MRI), to track and estimate MTA in cohorts of controls, AD, and mild cognitive impairment subjects, at high-risk of progression to dementia. In this paper, we investigated its reliability through analysis of within-session scan/repeat images and scan/rescans from large multicenter studies. In total, we used MRI data from 1051 subjects recruited at over 60 centers. We processed the data identically and calculated our metric for each individual, based on the concept of distance in a high-dimensional space of intensity and shape characteristics. Over 759 subjects, the scan/repeat change in the mean was 1.97 (SD: 21.2). Over three subjects, the scan/rescan change in the mean was 0.89 (SD: 22.1). At this level, the minimum trial size required to detect this difference is 68 individuals for both samples. Our scan/repeat and scan/rescan results demonstrate that our MTA assessment metric shows high reliability, a necessary component of validity. © 2012 Simon Duchesne et al.
CITATION STYLE
Duchesne, S., Valdivia, F., Mouiha, A., & Robitaille, N. (2012). Test-retest reliability of a new medial temporal atrophy morphological metric. International Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease. https://doi.org/10.1155/2012/979804
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.