Spinal cord atrophy is a clinically-relevant feature of multiple sclerosis (MS), but can be difficult to estimate longitudinally using segmentation-based methods. We applied a fully-automated registration-based technique for spinal cord atrophy measurement (Generalised Boundary Shift Integral-GBSI-) on MS patients (n=282) and controls (n=82), from MAGNIMS and Queen Square cohorts. GBSI provided similar spinal cord atrophy rates, compared with cervical cord cross-sectional area (CSA), but with lower variability and favourable sample size estimates. GBSI performed better than CSA in differentiating cases from controls, and in depicting MS clinical features. GBSI could be used to monitor disease progression and in neuroprotective trials.
This abstract and the presentation materials are available to members only; a login is required.