NeuroImage: Clinical (Jan 2019)

Validation of mean upper cervical cord area (MUCCA) measurement techniques in multiple sclerosis (MS): High reproducibility and robustness to lesions, but large software and scanner effects

  • M.M. Weeda,
  • S.M. Middelkoop,
  • M.D. Steenwijk,
  • M. Daams,
  • H. Amiri,
  • I. Brouwer,
  • J. Killestein,
  • B.M.J. Uitdehaag,
  • I. Dekker,
  • C. Lukas,
  • B. Bellenberg,
  • F. Barkhof,
  • P.J.W. Pouwels,
  • H. Vrenken

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24

Abstract

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Introduction: Atrophy of the spinal cord is known to occur in multiple sclerosis (MS). The mean upper cervical cord area (MUCCA) can be used to measure this atrophy. Currently, several (semi-)automated methods for MUCCA measurement exist, but validation in clinical magnetic resonance (MR) images is lacking. Methods: Five methods to measure MUCCA (SCT-PropSeg, SCT-DeepSeg, NeuroQLab, Xinapse JIM and ITK-SNAP) were investigated in a predefined upper cervical cord region. First, within-scanner reproducibility and between-scanner robustness were assessed using intra-class correlation coefficient (ICC) and Dice's similarity index (SI) in scan-rescan 3DT1-weighted images (brain, including cervical spine using a head coil) performed on three 3 T MR machines (GE MR750, Philips Ingenuity, Toshiba Vantage Titan) in 21 subjects with MS and 6 healthy controls (dataset A). Second, sensitivity of MUCCA measurement to lesions in the upper cervical cord was assessed with cervical 3D T1-weighted images (3 T GE HDxT using a head-neck-spine coil) in 7 subjects with MS without and 14 subjects with MS with cervical lesions (dataset B), using ICC and SI with manual reference segmentations. Results: In dataset A, MUCCA differed between MR machines (p 0.176). However, there was an effect of method for both volumetric and voxel wise agreement of the segmentations (both p < 0.001). Highest volumetric and voxel wise agreement was obtained with Xinapse JIM (ICC absolute agreement = 0.940 and median SI = 0.962). Conclusion: Although MUCCA is highly reproducible within a scanner for each individual measurement method, MUCCA differs between scanners and between methods. Cervical cord lesions do not affect MUCCA measurement performance. Keywords: Spinal cord, Cervical cord, Atrophy, Multiple sclerosis, MUCCA