Robust radiomic signatures of intervertebral disc degeneration from MRI
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Low back pain (LBP) is the most common musculoskeletal symptom worldwide and intervertebral disc (IVD) degeneration is an important contributing factor. To improve the quantitative phenotyping of IVD degeneration from T2-weighted MRI and better understand its relationship with LBP, multiple shape and intensity features have been investigated. IVD radiomics have been less studied but could reveal sub-visual imaging characteristics of IVD degeneration. The aim of this study was to identify a robust radiomic signature from deep learning segmentations for IVD degeneration classification. We used data from Northern Finland Birth Cohort 1966 members who underwent lumbar spine T2-weighted MRI scans at age 46-47 (n=1397). We used a deep learning model to segment the lumbar spine IVDs and extracted 737 radiomic features, as well as calculating IVD height index and peak signal intensity difference. Intraclass correlation coefficients across image and mask perturbations were calculated to identify robust features. Sparse partial least squares discriminant analysis was used to train a Pfirrmann grade classification model. The radiomics model had balanced accuracy of 76.7% (73.1-80.3%) and Cohen’s Kappa of 0.70 (0.67-0.74), compared to 66.0% (62.0-69.9%) and 0.55 (0.51-0.59) for an IVD height index and peak signal intensity model. 2D sphericity and interquartile range emerged as radiomicsbased features that were robust and highly correlated to Pfirrmann grade (Spearman’s correlation coefficients of −0.72 and −0.77 respectively). Based on our findings these radiomic signatures could serve as alternatives to the conventional indices, representing a significant advance in the automated quantitative phenotyping of IVD degeneration from standard-of-care MRI.