Finite element analysis informed variable selection for femoral fracture risk prediction

被引:10
|
作者
Taylor, Mark [1 ]
Viceconti, Marco [2 ,3 ]
Bhattacharya, Pinaki [4 ,5 ]
Li, Xinshan [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Flinders Univ S Australia, Coll Sci & Engn, Med Device Res Inst, Tonsley, SA, Australia
[2] Alma Mater Studiorum Univ Bologna, Dept Ind Engn, Bologna, Italy
[3] IRCCS Inst Ortoped Rizzoli, Med Technol Lab, Bologna, Italy
[4] Univ Sheffield, Dept Mech Engn, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England
[5] Univ Sheffield, Insigneo Inst Silico Med, Sheffield, S Yorkshire, England
基金
英国工程与自然科学研究理事会; 欧盟地平线“2020”;
关键词
QUANTITATIVE COMPUTED-TOMOGRAPHY; HIP-FRACTURE; PROXIMAL FEMUR; OSTEOPOROTIC FRACTURES; APPEARANCE MODELS; STATISTICAL SHAPE; BONE MASS; GEOMETRY; DENSITY; STRENGTH;
D O I
10.1016/j.jmbbm.2021.104434
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
Logistic regression classification (LRC) is widely used to develop models to predict the risk of femoral fracture. LRC models based on areal bone mineral density (aBMD) alone are poor, with area under the receiver operator curve (AUROC) scores reported to be as low as 0.63. This has led to researchers investigating methods to extract further information from the image to increase performance. Recently, the use of active shape (ASM) and appearance models (AAM) have resulted in moderate improvements, but there is a risk that inclusion of too many modes will lead to overfitting. In addition, there are concerns that the effort required to extract the additional information does not justify the modest improvement in fracture risk prediction. This raises the question, are we reaching the limits of the information that can be extracted from an image? Finite element analysis was used in combination with active shape and appearance modelling to select variables to develop LRC models of fracture risk. Active shape and active appearance models were constructed based on a previously reported cohort of 94 post-menopausal Caucasian women (47 with and 47 without a fracture). T-tests were used to identify differences between the two groups for each mode of variation. Femur strength was predicted for two load cases, stance and a fall. Stepwise multi-variate linear regression was used to identify shape and appearance modes that were predictors of strength for the femurs in the training set. Femurs were also synthetically generated to explore the influence of the first 10 modes of the shape and appearance models. Identified modes of variation were then used to generate LRC models to predict fracture risk. Only 6 modes, 4 active appearance and 2 active shape modes, were identified that had a significant influence on predicted fracture strength. Of these, only two active appearance modes were needed to substantially improve the predictive mode performance (Delta AUROC = 0.080). The addition of 3 more modes (1 AAM and two ASM) further improved the performance of the classifier (Delta AUROC = 0.123). Further addition of modes did not result in any further substantial improvements. Based on these findings, it is suggested that we are reaching the limits of the information that can be extracted from an image to predict fracture risk.
引用
收藏
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Risk Prediction of Femoral Head Necrosis: A Finite Element Analysis Based on Fracture Mechanics
    Li, Honggeng
    Li, Fan
    Liu, Niansong
    Li, Pengfei
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL METHODS, 2020, 17 (06)
  • [2] Finite Element Analysis for the Treatment of Proximal Femoral Fracture
    Hsu, Ching-Chi
    Lin, Jinn
    Amaritsakul, Yongyut
    Antonius, Takalamesar
    Chao, Ching-Kong
    CMC-COMPUTERS MATERIALS & CONTINUA, 2009, 11 (01): : 1 - 13
  • [3] THE USE OF A FINITE ELEMENT MODEL IMPROVES THE PREDICTION OF FEMORAL FRACTURE RISK IN COMPARISON TO THE PREDICTION OF EXPERIENCED CLINICIANS.
    van der Linden, Y.
    van Aken, J.
    Verdonschot, N.
    Huizenga, H.
    Tanck, E.
    RADIOTHERAPY AND ONCOLOGY, 2008, 88 : S310 - S310
  • [4] Fracture risk in the femoral hip region: A finite element analysis supported experimental approach
    Tsouknidas, Alexander
    Anagnostidis, Kleovoulos
    Maliaris, Georgios
    Michailidis, Nikolaos
    JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS, 2012, 45 (11) : 1959 - 1964
  • [5] Prediction of femoral fracture load using automated finite element modeling
    Keyak, JH
    Rossi, SA
    Jones, KA
    Skinner, HB
    JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS, 1998, 31 (02) : 125 - 133
  • [6] PREDICTION OF PROXIMAL FEMORAL FRACTURE IN SIDEWAYS FALLS USING NONLINEAR DYNAMIC FINITE ELEMENT ANALYSIS
    Zhang, Rui
    Gong, He
    Fang, Juan
    Gao, Zhenhai
    Zhu, Dong
    JOURNAL OF MECHANICS IN MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY, 2014, 14 (02)
  • [7] Stability of femoral neck fracture fixation: A finite element analysis
    Samsami, Shabnam
    Augat, Peter
    Rouhi, Gholamreza
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE INSTITUTION OF MECHANICAL ENGINEERS PART H-JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING IN MEDICINE, 2019, 233 (09) : 892 - 900
  • [8] Predicting femoral neck fracture using finite element analysis
    Testi, D
    Viceconti, M
    Cappello, A
    Gnudi, S
    COMPUTER METHODS IN BIOMECHANICS AND BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING - 3, 2001, : 9 - 14
  • [9] Fracture risk assessment of vascularized medial femoral condylar bone graft: A finite element analysis
    Yamagata, Hiroki
    Nishida, Norihiro
    Imagama, Takashi
    Okazaki, Tomoya
    Matsuki, Yuta
    Kaneoka, Takehiro
    Kawakami, Takehiro
    Kumaran, Yogesh
    Suzuki, Hidenori
    Sakai, Takashi
    JOURNAL OF PLASTIC RECONSTRUCTIVE AND AESTHETIC SURGERY, 2024, 91 : 83 - 93
  • [10] PREDICTION PROXIMAL FEMORAL FRACTURE FORCE AND PROFILE USING FINITE ELEMENT SIMULATION
    Hambli, R.
    OSTEOPOROSIS INTERNATIONAL, 2010, 21 : S682 - S682