Voxelwise statistical methods to localize practice variation in brain tumor surgery.

PURPOSE:During resections of brain tumors, neurosurgeons have to weigh the risk between residual tumor and damage to brain functions. Different perspectives on these risks result in practice variation. We present statistical methods to localize differences in extent of resection between institutions...

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Main Authors: Roelant Eijgelaar, Philip C De Witt Hamer, Carel F W Peeters, Frederik Barkhof, Marcel van Herk, Marnix G Witte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222939
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spelling doaj-6fb1beeb1bf84832b4e48c352852479b2021-03-03T21:21:33ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01149e022293910.1371/journal.pone.0222939Voxelwise statistical methods to localize practice variation in brain tumor surgery.Roelant EijgelaarPhilip C De Witt HamerCarel F W PeetersFrederik BarkhofMarcel van HerkMarnix G WittePURPOSE:During resections of brain tumors, neurosurgeons have to weigh the risk between residual tumor and damage to brain functions. Different perspectives on these risks result in practice variation. We present statistical methods to localize differences in extent of resection between institutions which should enable to reveal brain regions affected by such practice variation. METHODS:Synthetic data were generated by simulating spheres for brain, tumors, resection cavities, and an effect region in which a likelihood of surgical avoidance could be varied between institutions. Three statistical methods were investigated: a non-parametric permutation based approach, Fisher's exact test, and a full Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) model. For all three methods the false discovery rate (FDR) was determined as a function of the cut-off value for the q-value or the highest density interval, and receiver operating characteristic and precision recall curves were created. Sensitivity to variations in the parameters of the synthetic model were investigated. Finally, all these methods were applied to retrospectively collected data of 77 brain tumor resections in two academic hospitals. RESULTS:Fisher's method provided an accurate estimation of observed FDR in the synthetic data, whereas the permutation approach was too liberal and underestimated FDR. AUC values were similar for Fisher and Bayes methods, and superior to the permutation approach. Fisher's method deteriorated and became too liberal for reduced tumor size, a smaller size of the effect region, a lower overall extent of resection, fewer patients per cohort, and a smaller discrepancy in surgical avoidance probabilities between the different surgical practices. In the retrospective patient data, all three methods identified a similar effect region, with lower estimated FDR in Fisher's method than using the permutation method. CONCLUSIONS:Differences in surgical practice may be detected using voxel statistics. Fisher's test provides a fast method to localize differences but could underestimate true FDR. Bayesian MCMC is more flexible and easily extendable, and leads to similar results, but at increased computational cost.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222939
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Roelant Eijgelaar
Philip C De Witt Hamer
Carel F W Peeters
Frederik Barkhof
Marcel van Herk
Marnix G Witte
spellingShingle Roelant Eijgelaar
Philip C De Witt Hamer
Carel F W Peeters
Frederik Barkhof
Marcel van Herk
Marnix G Witte
Voxelwise statistical methods to localize practice variation in brain tumor surgery.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Roelant Eijgelaar
Philip C De Witt Hamer
Carel F W Peeters
Frederik Barkhof
Marcel van Herk
Marnix G Witte
author_sort Roelant Eijgelaar
title Voxelwise statistical methods to localize practice variation in brain tumor surgery.
title_short Voxelwise statistical methods to localize practice variation in brain tumor surgery.
title_full Voxelwise statistical methods to localize practice variation in brain tumor surgery.
title_fullStr Voxelwise statistical methods to localize practice variation in brain tumor surgery.
title_full_unstemmed Voxelwise statistical methods to localize practice variation in brain tumor surgery.
title_sort voxelwise statistical methods to localize practice variation in brain tumor surgery.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description PURPOSE:During resections of brain tumors, neurosurgeons have to weigh the risk between residual tumor and damage to brain functions. Different perspectives on these risks result in practice variation. We present statistical methods to localize differences in extent of resection between institutions which should enable to reveal brain regions affected by such practice variation. METHODS:Synthetic data were generated by simulating spheres for brain, tumors, resection cavities, and an effect region in which a likelihood of surgical avoidance could be varied between institutions. Three statistical methods were investigated: a non-parametric permutation based approach, Fisher's exact test, and a full Bayesian Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) model. For all three methods the false discovery rate (FDR) was determined as a function of the cut-off value for the q-value or the highest density interval, and receiver operating characteristic and precision recall curves were created. Sensitivity to variations in the parameters of the synthetic model were investigated. Finally, all these methods were applied to retrospectively collected data of 77 brain tumor resections in two academic hospitals. RESULTS:Fisher's method provided an accurate estimation of observed FDR in the synthetic data, whereas the permutation approach was too liberal and underestimated FDR. AUC values were similar for Fisher and Bayes methods, and superior to the permutation approach. Fisher's method deteriorated and became too liberal for reduced tumor size, a smaller size of the effect region, a lower overall extent of resection, fewer patients per cohort, and a smaller discrepancy in surgical avoidance probabilities between the different surgical practices. In the retrospective patient data, all three methods identified a similar effect region, with lower estimated FDR in Fisher's method than using the permutation method. CONCLUSIONS:Differences in surgical practice may be detected using voxel statistics. Fisher's test provides a fast method to localize differences but could underestimate true FDR. Bayesian MCMC is more flexible and easily extendable, and leads to similar results, but at increased computational cost.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0222939
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