4.6 Article

Morphometric Integrated Classification Index: A Multisite Model-Based, Interpretable, Shareable and Evolvable Biomarker for Schizophrenia

Journal

SCHIZOPHRENIA BULLETIN
Volume 48, Issue 6, Pages 1217-1227

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbac096

Keywords

schizophrenia; biomarker; multi-site; structural magnetic resonance imaging; machine learning; morphometric integrated classification index

Categories

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFC1314300]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81971599, 82030053, 81971694]
  3. Tianjin Key Project for Chronic Diseases Prevention [2017ZXMFSY00070]
  4. Science&Technology Development Fund of Tianjin Education Commission for Higher Education [2018KJ082]
  5. Tianjin Applied Basic Research Diversified Investment Foundation [21JCYBJC01490]

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This study proposed a potential biomarker for schizophrenia diagnosis, called MICI, based on structural magnetic resonance imaging data. The MICI measure achieved comparable performance to ensembling models and outperformed single-site models in independent-sample testing datasets, making it a generalizable and interpretable biomarker. MICI was strongly associated with the severity of schizophrenia, symptoms, and the expression profiles of schizophrenia risk genes, providing a simple and explainable way for objective diagnosis. The researchers also developed an online model share platform to promote the generalization of biomarkers.
Background and Hypothesis Multisite massive schizophrenia neuroimaging data sharing is becoming critical in understanding the pathophysiological mechanism and making an objective diagnosis of schizophrenia; it remains challenging to obtain a generalizable and interpretable, shareable, and evolvable neuroimaging biomarker for schizophrenia diagnosis. Study Design A Morphometric Integrated Classification Index (MICI) was proposed as a potential biomarker for schizophrenia diagnosis based on structural magnetic resonance imaging data of 1270 subjects from 10 sites (588 schizophrenia patients and 682 normal controls). An optimal XGBoost classifier plus sample-weighted SHapley Additive explanation algorithms were used to construct the MICI measure. Study Results The MICI measure achieved comparable performance with the sample-weighted ensembling model and merged model based on raw data (Delong test, P > 0.82) while outperformed the single-site models (Delong test, P < 0.05) in either the independent-sample testing datasets from the 9 sites or the independent-site dataset (generalizable). Besides, when new sites were embedded in, the performance of this measure was gradually increasing (evolvable). Finally, MICI was strongly associated with the severity of schizophrenia brain structural abnormality, with the patients' positive and negative symptoms, and with the brain expression profiles of schizophrenia risk genes (interpretable). Conclusions In summary, the proposed MICI biomarker may provide a simple and explainable way to support clinicians for objectively diagnosing schizophrenia. Finally, we developed an online model share platform to promote biomarker generalization and provide free individual prediction services (http://micc.tmu.edu.cn/mici/index.html).

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