Brain and Behavior (Nov 2022)

Research on nonstroke dementia screening and cognitive function prediction model for older people based on brain atrophy characteristics

  • Wei Zhang,
  • Xiaoran Zheng,
  • Renren Li,
  • Meng Liu,
  • Weixin Xiao,
  • Lihe Huang,
  • Feiyang Xu,
  • Ningxin Dong,
  • Yunxia Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/brb3.2726
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 11
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Background Brain atrophy is an important feature in dementia and is meaningful to explore a brain atrophy model to predict dementia. Using machine learning algorithm to establish a dementia model and cognitive function model based on brain atrophy characteristics is unstoppable. Method We acquired 157 dementia and 156 normal old people.s clinical information and MRI data, which contains 44 brain atrophy features, including visual scale assessment of brain atrophy and multiple linear measurement indexes and brain atrophy index. Five machine learning models were used to establish prediction models for dementia, general cognition, and subcognitive domains. Results The extreme Gradient Boosting (XGBoost) model had the best effect in predicting dementia, with a sensitivity of 0.645, a specificity of 0.839, and the area under curve (AUC) of 0.784. In this model, the important brain atrophy features for predicting dementia were temporal horn ratio, cella media index, suprasellar cistern ratio, and the thickness of the corpus callosum genu. Conclusion For nonstroke elderly people, the machine learning model based on clinical head MRI brain atrophy features had good predictive value for dementia, general cognitive impairment, immediate memory impairment, word fluency disorder, executive dysfunction, and visualspatial disorder.

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