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The LONI QC System: A Semi-Automated, Web-Based and Freely-Available Environment for the Comprehensive Quality Control of Neuroimaging Data.
Quantifying, controlling, and monitoring image quality is an essential prerequisite for ensuring the validity and reproducibility of many types of neuroimaging data analyses. Implementation of quality control (QC) procedures is the key to ensuring that neuroimaging data are of high-quality and their validity in the subsequent analyses. We introduce the QC system of the Laboratory of Neuro Imaging (LONI): a web-based system featuring a workflow for the assessment of various modality and contrast brain imaging data. The design allows users to anonymously upload imaging data to the LONI-QC system. It then computes an exhaustive set of QC metrics which aids users to perform a standardized QC by generating a range of scalar and vector statistics. These procedures are performed in parallel using a large compute cluster. Finally, the system offers an automated QC procedure for structural MRI, which can flag each QC metric as being 'good' or 'bad.' Validation using various sets of data acquired from a single scanner and from multiple sites demonstrated the reproducibility of our QC metrics, and the sensitivity and specificity of the proposed Auto QC to 'bad' quality images in comparison to visual inspection. To the best of our knowledge, LONI-QC is the first online QC system that uniquely supports the variety of functionality where we compute numerous QC metrics and perform visual/automated image QC of multi-contrast and multi-modal brain imaging data. The LONI-QC system has been used to assess the quality of large neuroimaging datasets acquired as part of various multi-site studies such as the Transforming Research and Clinical Knowledge in Traumatic Brain Injury (TRACK-TBI) Study and the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI). LONI-QC's functionality is freely available to users worldwide and its adoption by imaging researchers is likely to contribute substantially to upholding high standards of brain image data quality and to implementing these standards across the neuroimaging community
Quantitative analysis with machine learning models for multi-parametric brain imaging data
Gliomas are considered to be the most common primary adult malignant brain tumor. With the dramatic increases in computational power and improvements in image analysis algorithms, computer-aided medical image analysis has been introduced into clinical applications. Precision tumor grading and genotyping play an indispensable role in clinical diagnosis, treatment and prognosis. Gliomas diagnostic procedures include histopathological imaging tests, molecular imaging scans and tumor grading. Pathologic review of tumor morphology in histologic sections is the traditional method for cancer classification and grading, yet human study has limitations that can result in low reproducibility and inter-observer agreement. Compared with histopathological images, Magnetic resonance (MR) imaging present the different structure and functional features, which might serve as noninvasive surrogates for tumor genotypes. Therefore, computer-aided image analysis has been adopted in clinical application, which might partially overcome these shortcomings due to its capacity to quantitatively and reproducibly measure multilevel features on multi-parametric medical information. Imaging features obtained from a single modal image do not fully represent the disease, so quantitative imaging features, including morphological, structural, cellular and molecular level features, derived from multi-modality medical images should be integrated into computer-aided medical image analysis. The image quality differentiation between multi-modality images is a challenge in the field of computer-aided medical image analysis. In this thesis, we aim to integrate the quantitative imaging data obtained from multiple modalities into mathematical models of tumor prediction response to achieve additional insights into practical predictive value. Our major contributions in this thesis are: 1. Firstly, to resolve the imaging quality difference and observer-dependent in histological image diagnosis, we proposed an automated machine-learning brain tumor-grading platform to investigate contributions of multi-parameters from multimodal data including imaging parameters or features from Whole Slide Images (WSI) and the proliferation marker KI-67. For each WSI, we extract both visual parameters such as morphology parameters and sub-visual parameters including first-order and second-order features. A quantitative interpretable machine learning approach (Local Interpretable Model-Agnostic Explanations) was followed to measure the contribution of features for single case. Most grading systems based on machine learning models are considered “black boxes,” whereas with this system the clinically trusted reasoning could be revealed. The quantitative analysis and explanation may assist clinicians to better understand the disease and accordingly to choose optimal treatments for improving clinical outcomes. 2. Based on the automated brain tumor-grading platform we propose, multimodal Magnetic Resonance Images (MRIs) have been introduced in our research. A new imaging–tissue correlation based approach called RA-PA-Thomics was proposed to predict the IDH genotype. Inspired by the concept of image fusion, we integrate multimodal MRIs and the scans of histopathological images for indirect, fast, and cost saving IDH genotyping. The proposed model has been verified by multiple evaluation criteria for the integrated data set and compared to the results in the prior art. The experimental data set includes public data sets and image information from two hospitals. Experimental results indicate that the model provided improves the accuracy of glioma grading and genotyping
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