RS-FetMRI: a MATLAB-SPM Based Tool for Pre-processing Fetal Resting-State fMRI Data
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2022
Short description:
RS-FetMRI: a MATLAB-SPM Based Tool for Pre-processing Fetal Resting-State fMRI Data / Pecco, N., Canini, M., Mosser, K.H.H., Caglioni, M., Scifo, P., Castellano, A., Cavoretto, P., Candiani, M., Baldoli, C., Falini, A., Rosa, P.A.D.. - In: NEUROINFORMATICS. - ISSN 1539-2791. - 20:4(2022), pp. 1137-1154. [10.1007/s12021-022-09592-5]
abstract:
Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rs-fMRI) most recently has proved to open a measureless window on functional neurodevelopment in utero. Fetal brain activation and connectivity maps can be heavily influenced by 1) fetal-specific motion effects on the time-series and 2) the accuracy of time-series spatial normalization to a standardized gestational-week (GW) specific fetal template space. Due to the absence of a standardized and generalizable image processing protocol, the objective of the present work was to implement a validated fetal rs-fMRI preprocessing pipeline (RS-FetMRI) divided into 6 inter-dependent preprocessing modules (i.e., M1 to M6) and designed to work entirely as an extension for Statistical Parametric Mapping (SPM). RS-FetMRI pipeline output analyses on rs-fMRI time-series sampled from a cohort of fetuses acquired on both 1.5 T and 3 T MRI scanning systems showed increased efficacy of estimation of the degree of movement coupled with an efficient motion censoring procedure, resulting in increased number of motion-uncorrupted volumes and temporal continuity in fetal rs-fMRI time-series data. Moreover, a “structural-free” SPM-based spatial normalization procedure granted a high degree of spatial overlap with high reproducibility and a significant improvement in whole-brain and parcellation-specific Temporal Signal-to-Noise Ratio (TSNR) mirrored by functional connectivity analysis. To our knowledge, the RS-FetMRI pipeline is the first semi-automatic and easy-to-use standardized fetal rs-fMRI preprocessing pipeline completely integrated in MATLAB-SPM able to remove entry barriers for new research groups into the field of fetal rs-fMRI, for both research or clinical purposes, and ultimately to make future fetal brain connectivity investigations more suitable for comparison and cross-validation.
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Fetal; Motion estimation; Pipeline; Pre-processing; Resting-state Fmri; Spatial normalization; Humans; Reproducibility of Results; Rest; Image Processing, Computer-Assisted; Brain; Fetus; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Brain Mapping
List of contributors:
Pecco, N.; Canini, M.; Mosser, K. H. H.; Caglioni, M.; Scifo, P.; Castellano, A.; Cavoretto, P.; Candiani, M.; Baldoli, C.; Falini, A.; Rosa, P. A. D.
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