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Research Article

A prospective reappraisal of motor outcome prediction in patients with acute stroke by using atlas-based diffusion tensor imaging biomarkers

, , , , , & show all
Pages 199-210 | Received 17 Jan 2023, Accepted 13 May 2023, Published online: 20 May 2023
 

ABSTRACT

Background

Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) biomarkers can be used to quantify microstructural changes in the cerebral white matter (WM) following injury.

Objectives

This prospective single-center study aimed to evaluate whether atlas-based DTI-derived metrics obtained within 1 week after stroke can predict the motor outcome at 3 months.

Methods

Forty patients with small acute stroke (2–7 days after onset) involving the corticospinal tract were included. Each patient underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) within 1 week and at 3 months after stroke, and the changes based on DTI-derived metrics were compared by performing WM tract atlas-based quantitative analysis.

Results

A total of 40 patients were included, with median age 63.5 years and a majority of males (72.5%). Patients were classified into good-prognosis group (mRS 0–2, n = 27) and poor-prognosis group (mRS 3–5, n = 13) by outcome. The median (25th-75th percentile) of MD (0.7 (0.6–0.7) vs. 0.7 (0.7–0.8); p = 0.049) and AD (0.6 (0.5, 0.7) vs. 0.7 (0.6, 0.8); p = 0.023) ratios within 1 week were significantly lower in the poor-prognosis group compared to the good-prognosis group. The ROC curve of the combined DTI-derived metrics model showed comparable Youden index (65.5% vs. 58.4%–65.4%) and higher specificity (96.3% vs. 69.2%–88.5%) compared to clinical indexes. The area under the ROC curve of the combined DTI-derived metrics model is comparable to those of the clinical indexes (all p > 0.1) and higher than those of the individual DTI-derived metrics parameters.

Conclusions

Atlas-based DTI-derived metrics at acute stage provide objective information for prognosis prediction of patients with ischemic or lacunar stroke.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

This study was funded by grants from Taoyuan Armed Forces General Hospital, Taiwan (AFTYGH-10737), and Taipei Medical University Hospital, Taiwan (110TMU-TMUH-19).

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