Regional brain morphology predicts pain relief in trigeminal neuralgia

Neuroimage Clin. 2021:31:102706. doi: 10.1016/j.nicl.2021.102706. Epub 2021 May 25.

Abstract

Background: Trigeminal neuralgia, a severe chronic neuropathic pain disorder, is widely believed to be amenable to surgical treatments. Nearly 20% of patients, however, do not have adequate pain relief after surgery. Objective tools for personalized pre-treatment prognostication of pain relief following surgical interventions can minimize unnecessary surgeries and thus are of substantial benefit for patients and clinicians.

Purpose: To determine if pre-treatment regional brain morphology-based machine learning models can prognosticate 1 year response to Gamma Knife radiosurgery for trigeminal neuralgia.

Methods: We used a data-driven approach that combined retrospective structural neuroimaging data and support vector machine-based machine learning to produce robust multivariate prediction models of pain relief following Gamma Knife radiosurgery for trigeminal neuralgia. Surgical response was defined as ≥ 75% pain relief 1 year post-treatment. We created two prediction models using pre-treatment regional brain gray matter morphology (cortical thickness or surface area) to distinguish responders from non-responders to radiosurgery. Feature selection was performed through sequential backwards selection algorithm. Model out-of-sample generalizability was estimated via stratified 10-fold cross-validation procedure and permutation testing.

Results: In 51 trigeminal neuralgia patients (35 responders, 16 non-responders), machine learning models based on pre-treatment regional brain gray matter morphology (14 regional surface areas or 13 regional cortical thicknesses) provided robust a priori prediction of surgical response. Cross-validation revealed the regional surface area model was 96.7% accurate, 100.0% sensitive, and 89.1% specific while the regional cortical thickness model was 90.5% accurate, 93.5% sensitive, and 83.7% specific. Permutation testing revealed that both models performed beyond pure chance (p < 0.001). The best predictor for regional surface area model and regional cortical thickness model was contralateral superior frontal gyrus and contralateral isthmus cingulate gyrus, respectively.

Conclusions: Our findings support the use of machine learning techniques in subsequent investigations of chronic neuropathic pain. Furthermore, our multivariate framework provides foundation for future development of generalizable, artificial intelligence-driven tools for chronic neuropathic pain treatments.

Keywords: Brain morphology; Chronic neuropathic pain; Machine learning; Pain relief; Trigeminal neuralgia.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Brain / diagnostic imaging
  • Brain / surgery
  • Humans
  • Pain
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Trigeminal Neuralgia* / diagnostic imaging
  • Trigeminal Neuralgia* / surgery