Quantitative Intracerebral Hemorrhage Localization.
Publication/Presentation Date
11-1-2015
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: The location of intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH) is currently described in a qualitative way; we provide a quantitative framework for estimating ICH engagement and its relevance to stroke outcomes.
METHODS: We analyzed 111 patients with ICH from the Minimally Invasive Surgery Plus Recombinant-Tissue Plasminogen Activator for Intracerebral Evacuation (MISTIE) II clinical trial. We estimated ICH engagement at a population level using image registration of computed tomographic scans to a template and a previously labeled atlas. Predictive regions of National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and Glasgow Coma Scale stroke severity scores, collected at enrollment, were estimated.
RESULTS: The percent coverage of the ICH by these regions strongly outperformed the reader-labeled locations. The adjusted R(2) almost doubled from 0.129 (reader-labeled model) to 0.254 (quantitative location model) for National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and more than tripled from 0.069 (reader-labeled model) to 0.214 (quantitative location model). A permutation test confirmed that the new predictive regions are more predictive than chance: P< 0.001 for National Institutes of Health Stroke Scale and P< 0.01 for Glasgow Coma Scale.
CONCLUSIONS: Objective measures of ICH location and engagement using advanced computed tomographic imaging processing provide finer, objective, and more quantitative anatomic information than that provided by human readers.
CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov. Unique identifier: NCT00224770.
Volume
46
Issue
11
First Page
3270
Last Page
3273
ISSN
1524-4628
Published In/Presented At
Muschelli, J., Ullman, N. L., Sweeney, E. M., Eloyan, A., Martin, N., Vespa, P., Hanley, D. F., & Crainiceanu, C. M. (2015). Quantitative Intracerebral Hemorrhage Localization. Stroke, 46(11), 3270–3273. https://doi.org/10.1161/STROKEAHA.115.010369
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences | Pediatrics
PubMedID
26451031
Department(s)
Department of Pediatrics
Document Type
Article