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- Fabio Galbusera, Andrea Cina, Dave O'Riordan, Jacopo A Vitale, Markus Loibl, Tamás F Fekete, Frank Kleinstück, Daniel Haschtmann, and Anne F Mannion.
- Department of Teaching, Research and Development, Schulthess Clinic, Lengghalde 2, Zurich, 8008, Switzerland. fabio.galbusera@kws.ch.
- Eur Spine J. 2024 Nov 1; 33 (11): 409241034092-4103.
PurposeThis study aimed to develop machine learning methods to estimate bone mineral density and detect osteopenia/osteoporosis from conventional lumbar MRI (T1-weighted and T2-weighted images) and planar radiography in combination with clinical data and imaging parameters of the acquisition protocol.MethodsA database of 429 patients subjected to lumbar MRI, radiographs and dual-energy x-ray absorptiometry within 6 months was created from an institutional database. Several machine learning models were trained and tested (373 patients for training, 86 for testing) with the following objectives: (1) direct estimation of the vertebral bone mineral density; (2) classification of T-score lower than - 1 or (3) lower than - 2.5. The models took as inputs either the images or radiomics features derived from them, alone or in combination with metadata (age, sex, body size, vertebral level, parameters of the imaging protocol).ResultsThe best-performing models achieved mean absolute errors of 0.15-0.16 g/cm2 for the direct estimation of bone mineral density, and areas under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.82 (MRIs) - 0.80 (radiographs) for the classification of T-scores lower than - 1, and 0.80 (MRIs) - 0.65 (radiographs) for T-scores lower than - 2.5.ConclusionsThe models showed good discriminative performances in detecting cases of low bone mineral density, and more limited capabilities for the direct estimation of its value. Being based on routine imaging and readily available data, such models are promising tools to retrospectively analyse existing datasets as well as for the opportunistic investigation of bone disorders.© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature.
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