Scientific Reports (Dec 2021)

Machine learning of native T1 mapping radiomics for classification of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy phenotypes

  • Alexios S. Antonopoulos,
  • Maria Boutsikou,
  • Spyridon Simantiris,
  • Andreas Angelopoulos,
  • George Lazaros,
  • Ioannis Panagiotopoulos,
  • Evangelos Oikonomou,
  • Mikela Kanoupaki,
  • Dimitris Tousoulis,
  • Raad H. Mohiaddin,
  • Konstantinos Tsioufis,
  • Charalambos Vlachopoulos

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-02971-z
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract We explored whether radiomic features from T1 maps by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) could enhance the diagnostic value of T1 mapping in distinguishing health from disease and classifying cardiac disease phenotypes. A total of 149 patients (n = 30 with no heart disease, n = 30 with LVH, n = 61 with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and n = 28 with cardiac amyloidosis) undergoing a CMR scan were included in this study. We extracted a total of 850 radiomic features and explored their value in disease classification. We applied principal component analysis and unsupervised clustering in exploratory analysis, and then machine learning for feature selection of the best radiomic features that maximized the diagnostic value for cardiac disease classification. The first three principal components of the T1 radiomics were distinctively correlated with cardiac disease type. Unsupervised hierarchical clustering of the population by myocardial T1 radiomics was significantly associated with myocardial disease type (chi2 = 55.98, p < 0.0001). After feature selection, internal validation and external testing, a model of T1 radiomics had good diagnostic performance (AUC 0.753) for multinomial classification of disease phenotype (normal vs. LVH vs. HCM vs. cardiac amyloid). A subset of six radiomic features outperformed mean native T1 values for classification between myocardial health vs. disease and HCM phenocopies (AUC of T1 vs. radiomics model, for normal: 0.549 vs. 0.888; for LVH: 0.645 vs. 0.790; for HCM 0.541 vs. 0.638; and for cardiac amyloid 0.769 vs. 0.840). We show that myocardial texture assessed by native T1 maps is linked to features of cardiac disease. Myocardial radiomic phenotyping could enhance the diagnostic yield of T1 mapping for myocardial disease detection and classification.