Frontiers in Neurology (Oct 2021)

Adapting the UK Biobank Brain Imaging Protocol and Analysis Pipeline for the C-MORE Multi-Organ Study of COVID-19 Survivors

  • Ludovica Griffanti,
  • Ludovica Griffanti,
  • Betty Raman,
  • Betty Raman,
  • Fidel Alfaro-Almagro,
  • Nicola Filippini,
  • Mark Philip Cassar,
  • Fintan Sheerin,
  • Thomas W. Okell,
  • Flora A. Kennedy McConnell,
  • Flora A. Kennedy McConnell,
  • Flora A. Kennedy McConnell,
  • Michael A. Chappell,
  • Michael A. Chappell,
  • Michael A. Chappell,
  • Michael A. Chappell,
  • Chaoyue Wang,
  • Christoph Arthofer,
  • Frederik J. Lange,
  • Jesper Andersson,
  • Clare E. Mackay,
  • Clare E. Mackay,
  • Elizabeth M. Tunnicliffe,
  • Matthew Rowland,
  • Stefan Neubauer,
  • Stefan Neubauer,
  • Karla L. Miller,
  • Peter Jezzard,
  • Stephen M. Smith

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2021.753284
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

Read online

SARS-CoV-2 infection has been shown to damage multiple organs, including the brain. Multiorgan MRI can provide further insight on the repercussions of COVID-19 on organ health but requires a balance between richness and quality of data acquisition and total scan duration. We adapted the UK Biobank brain MRI protocol to produce high-quality images while being suitable as part of a post-COVID-19 multiorgan MRI exam. The analysis pipeline, also adapted from UK Biobank, includes new imaging-derived phenotypes (IDPs) designed to assess the possible effects of COVID-19. A first application of the protocol and pipeline was performed in 51 COVID-19 patients post-hospital discharge and 25 controls participating in the Oxford C-MORE study. The protocol acquires high resolution T1, T2-FLAIR, diffusion weighted images, susceptibility weighted images, and arterial spin labelling data in 17 min. The automated imaging pipeline derives 1,575 IDPs, assessing brain anatomy (including olfactory bulb volume and intensity) and tissue perfusion, hyperintensities, diffusivity, and susceptibility. In the C-MORE data, IDPs related to atrophy, small vessel disease and olfactory bulbs were consistent with clinical radiology reports. Our exploratory analysis tentatively revealed some group differences between recovered COVID-19 patients and controls, across severity groups, but not across anosmia groups. Follow-up imaging in the C-MORE study is currently ongoing, and this protocol is now being used in other large-scale studies. The protocol, pipeline code and data are openly available and will further contribute to the understanding of the medium to long-term effects of COVID-19.

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