Frontiers in Pediatrics (Nov 2024)

Fetal gestational age prediction via shape descriptors of cortical development

  • Tommaso Ciceri,
  • Tommaso Ciceri,
  • Letizia Squarcina,
  • Alessandra Bertoldo,
  • Alessandra Bertoldo,
  • Paolo Brambilla,
  • Paolo Brambilla,
  • Simone Melzi,
  • Denis Peruzzo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fped.2024.1471080
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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IntroductionGyrification is the intricate process through which the mammalian cerebral cortex develops its characteristic pattern of sulci and gyri. Monitoring gyrification provides valuable insights into brain development and identifies potential abnormalities at an early stage. This study analyzes the cortical structure in neurotypical and pathological (spina bifida) fetuses using various shape descriptors to shed light on the gyrification process during pregnancy.MethodsWe compare morphometric properties encoded by commonly used scalar point-wise curvature-based signatures—such as mean curvature (H), Gaussian curvature (K), shape index (SI), and curvedness (C)—with multidimensional point-wise shape signatures, including spectral geometry processing methods like the Heat Kernel Signature (HKS) and Wave Kernel Signature (WKS), as well as the Signature of Histograms of Orientations (SHOT), which combines histogram and signature techniques. These latter signatures originate from computer graphics techniques and are rarely applied in the medical field. We propose a novel technique to derive a global descriptor from a given point-wise signature, obtaining GHKS, GWKS, and GSHOT. The extracted signatures are then evaluated using Support Vector Regression (SVR)-based algorithms to predict fetal gestational age (GA).ResultsGSHOT better encodes the GA to other global multidimensional point-wise shape signatures (GHKS, GWKS) and commonly used scalar point-wise curvature-based signatures (C, H, K, SI, FI), achieving a prediction R2 of 0.89 and a mean absolute error of 6 days in neurotypical fetuses, and a R2 of 0.64 and a mean absolute error of 10 days in pathological fetuses.ConclusionGSHOT provides researchers with an advanced tool to capture more nuanced aspects of fetal brain development and, specifically, of the gyrification process.

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