Comparison of Normative Percentiles of Brain Volume Obtained from NeuroQuantⓇ
vs. DeepBrainⓇ in the Korean Population: Correlation with Cranial Shape
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Radiology, Ewha Womans University Mokdong Hospital, Seoul, Korea
- 2Department of Radiology, Kangwon National University Hospital, Chuncheon, Korea
Abstract
- Purpose
This study aimed to compare the volume and normative percentiles of brain volumetry in the Korean population using quantitative brain volumetric MRI analysis tools NeuroQuantⓇ (NQ) and DeepBrainⓇ (DB), and to evaluate whether the differences in the normative percentiles of brain volumetry between the two tools is related to cranial shape.
Materials and Methods
In this retrospective study, we analyzed the brain volume reports obtained from NQ and DB in 163 participants without gross structural brain abnormalities. We measured threedimensional diameters to evaluate the cranial shape on T1-weighted images. Statistical analyses were performed using intra-class correlation coefficients and linear correlations.
Results
The mean normative percentiles of the thalamus (90.8 vs. 63.3 percentile), putamen (90.0 vs.
60.0 percentile), and parietal lobe (80.1 vs. 74.1 percentile) were larger in the NQ group than in the DB group, whereas that of the occipital lobe (18.4 vs. 68.5 percentile) was smaller in the NQ group than in the DB group. We found a significant correlation between the mean normative percentiles obtained from the NQ and cranial shape: the mean normative percentile of the occipital lobe increased with the anteroposterior diameter and decreased with the craniocaudal diameter.
Conclusion
The mean normative percentiles obtained from NQ and DB differed significantly for many brain regions, and these differences may be related to cranial shape.