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Test-retest reliability of the default mode network in a multi-centric fMRI study of healthy elderly: Effects of data-driven physiological noise correction techniques
ISSN
1065-9471
Date Issued
2016
Author(s)
Marchitelli, Rocco
Minati, Ludovico
Marizzoni, Moira
Bosch, Beatriz
Bartrés-Faz, David
Müller, Bernhard W.
Fiedler, Ute
Roccatagliata, Luca
Picco, Agnese
Nobili, Flavio
Blin, Oliver
Bombois, Stephanie
Lopes, Renaud
Bordet, Régis
Sein, Julien
Ranjeva, Jean-Philippe
Didic, Mira
Gros-Dagnac, Hélène
Payoux, Pierre
Zoccatelli, Giada
Alessandrini, Franco
Beltramello, Alberto
Bargalló, Núria
Ferretti, Antonio
Caulo, Massimo
Aiello, Marco
Cavaliere, Carlo
Soricelli, Andrea
Parnetti, Lucilla
Tarducci, Roberto
Floridi, Piero
Tsolaki, Magda
Constantinidis, Manos
Drevelegas, Antonios
Rossini, Paolo Maria
Marra, Camillo
Schönknecht, Peter
Hensch, Tilman
Hoffmann, Karl-Titus
Kuijer, Joost P.
Visser, Pieter Jelle
Barkhof, Frederik
Frisoni, Giovanni B.
Jovicich, Jorge
DOI
10.1002/hbm.23157
Abstract
Understanding how to reduce the influence of physiological noise in resting state fMRI data is important for the interpretation of functional brain connectivity. Limited data is currently available to assess the performance of physiological noise correction techniques, in particular when evaluating longitudinal changes in the default mode network (DMN) of healthy elderly participants. In this 3T harmonized multisite fMRI study, we investigated how different retrospective physiological noise correction (rPNC) methods influence the within-site test-retest reliability and the across-site reproducibility consistency of DMN-derived measurements across 13 MRI sites. Elderly participants were scanned twice at least a week apart (five participants per site). The rPNC methods were: none (NPC), Tissue-based regression, PESTICA and FSL-FIX. The DMN at the single subject level was robustly identified using ICA methods in all rPNC conditions. The methods significantly affected the mean z-scores and, albeit less markedly, the cluster-size in the DMN; in particular, FSL-FIX tended to increase the DMN z-scores compared to others. Within-site test-retest reliability was consistent across sites, with no differences across rPNC methods. The absolute percent errors were in the range of 5–11% for DMN z-scores and cluster-size reliability. DMN pattern overlap was in the range 60–65%. In particular, no rPNC method showed a significant reliability improvement relative to NPC. However, FSL-FIX and Tissue-based physiological correction methods showed both similar and significant improvements of reproducibility consistency across the consortium (ICC = 0.67) for the DMN z-scores relative to NPC. Overall these findings support the use of rPNC methods like tissue-based or FSL-FIX to characterize multisite longitudinal changes of intrinsic functional connectivity.