A precision medicine framework for personalized simulation of hemodynamics in cerebrovascular disease

Cerebrovascular disease, in particular stroke, is a major public health challenge. An important biomarker is cerebral hemodynamics. To measure and quantify cerebral hemodynamics, however, only invasive, potentially harmful or time-to-treatment prolonging methods are available. We present a simulatio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biomedical engineering online 2021-05, Vol.20 (1), p.44-20, Article 44
Hauptverfasser: Frey, Dietmar, Livne, Michelle, Leppin, Heiko, Akay, Ela M, Aydin, Orhun U, Behland, Jonas, Sobesky, Jan, Vajkoczy, Peter, Madai, Vince I
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cerebrovascular disease, in particular stroke, is a major public health challenge. An important biomarker is cerebral hemodynamics. To measure and quantify cerebral hemodynamics, however, only invasive, potentially harmful or time-to-treatment prolonging methods are available. We present a simulation-based approach which allows calculation of cerebral hemodynamics based on the patient-individual vessel configuration derived from structural vessel imaging. For this, we implemented a framework allowing segmentation and annotation of brain vessels from structural imaging followed by 0-dimensional lumped simulation modeling of cerebral hemodynamics. For annotation, a 3D-graphical user interface was implemented. For 0D-simulation, we used a modified nodal analysis, which was adapted for easy implementation by code. The simulation enables identification of areas vulnerable to stroke and simulation of changes due to different systemic blood pressures. Moreover, sensitivity analysis was implemented allowing the live simulation of changes to simulate procedures and disease progression. Beyond presentation of the framework, we demonstrated in an exploratory analysis in 67 patients that the simulation has a high specificity and low-to-moderate sensitivity to detect perfusion changes in classic perfusion imaging. The presented precision medicine approach using novel biomarkers has the potential to make the application of harmful and complex perfusion methods obsolete.
ISSN:1475-925X
1475-925X
DOI:10.1186/s12938-021-00880-w