作者
Yang Li,Wesley K. Thompson,Chase Reuter,Ryan M. Nillo,Terry L. Jernigan,Anders M. Dale,Leo P. Sugrue,Julian Brown,Robert F. Dougherty,Andreas M. Rauschecker,Jeffrey D. Rudie,Deanna M. Barch,Vince D. Calhoun,Donald J. Hagler,Sean N. Hatton,Jody Tanabe,Andrew T. Marshall,Kenneth J. Sher,Steven G. Heeringa,Robert Hermosillo,Marie T. Banich,Lindsay M. Squeglia,James M. Bjork,Robert A. Zucker,Michael C. Neale,Megan M. Herting,Chandni Sheth,Rebekah S. Huber,Gloria Reeves,John M. Hettema,Katia Delrahim Howlett,Christine Cloak,Arielle Baskin‐Sommers,Kristina M. Rapuano,Raúl González,Nicole R. Karcher,Angela R. Laird,Fiona C. Baker,Regina S. James,Elizabeth R. Sowell,Anthony Steven Dick,Samuel W. Hawes,Matthew T. Sutherland,Kara Bagot,Jerzy Bodurka,Florence J. Breslin,Amanda Sheffield Morris,Martin P. Paulus,Kevin M. Gray,Elizabeth A. Hoffman,Susan R.B. Weiss,Nishadi Rajapakse,Meyer D. Glantz,Bonnie J. Nagel,Sarah Feldstein Ewing,Aimée Goldstone,Adolf Pfefferbaum,Devin Prouty,Monica D. Rosenberg,Susan Y. Bookheimer,Susan F. Tapert,M. Alejandra Infante,Joanna Jacobus,Jay N. Giedd,Paul D. Shilling,Natasha E. Wade,Kristina A. Uban,Frank Haist,Charles J. Heyser,Clare E. Palmer,Joshua Kuperman,John K. Hewitt,Linda B. Cottler,Amal Isaiah,Linda Chang,Sarah Edwards,Thomas Ernst,Mary M. Heitzeg,Leon I. Puttler,Chandra Sripada,William G. Iacono,Mónica Luciana,Duncan B. Clark,Beatríz Luna,Claudiu Schirda,John J. Foxe,Edward G. Freedman,Michael Mason,Erin McGlade,Perry F. Renshaw,Deborah Yurgelun‐Todd,Matthew D. Albaugh,Nicholas Allgaier,Bader Chaarani,Alexandra Potter,Masha Y. Ivanova,Krista M. Lisdahl,K. Elizabeth,Hermine H. Maes,Ryan Bogdan,Andrey P. Anokhin,Nico U.F. Dosenbach,Paul E.A. Glaser,Andrew C. Heath,B. J. Casey,Dylan G. Gee,Hugh Garavan,Gaya Dowling,Sandra A. Brown
摘要
Incidental findings (IFs) are unexpected abnormalities discovered during imaging and can range from normal anatomic variants to findings requiring urgent medical intervention. In the case of brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), reliable data about the prevalence and significance of IFs in the general population are limited, making it difficult to anticipate, communicate, and manage these findings.To determine the overall prevalence of IFs in brain MRI in the nonclinical pediatric population as well as the rates of specific findings and findings for which clinical referral is recommended.This cohort study was based on the April 2019 release of baseline data from 11 810 children aged 9 to 10 years who were enrolled and completed baseline neuroimaging in the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development (ABCD) study, the largest US population-based longitudinal observational study of brain development and child health, between September 1, 2016, and November 15, 2018. Participants were enrolled at 21 sites across the US designed to mirror the demographic characteristics of the US population. Baseline structural MRIs were centrally reviewed for IFs by board-certified neuroradiologists and findings were described and categorized (category 1, no abnormal findings; 2, no referral recommended; 3; consider referral; and 4, consider immediate referral). Children were enrolled through a broad school-based recruitment process in which all children of eligible age at selected schools were invited to participate. Exclusion criteria were severe sensory, intellectual, medical, or neurologic disorders that would preclude or interfere with study participation. During the enrollment process, demographic data were monitored to ensure that the study met targets for sex, socioeconomic, ethnic, and racial diversity. Data were analyzed from March 15, 2018, to November 20, 2020.Percentage of children with IFs in each category and prevalence of specific IFs.A total of 11 679 children (52.1% boys, mean [SD] age, 9.9 [0.62] years) had interpretable baseline structural MRI results. Of these, 2464 participants (21.1%) had IFs, including 2013 children (17.2%) assigned to category 2, 431 (3.7%) assigned to category 3, and 20 (0.2%) assigned to category 4. Overall rates of IFs did not differ significantly between singleton and twin gestations or between monozygotic and dizygotic twins, but heritability analysis showed heritability for the presence or absence of IFs (h2 = 0.260; 95% CI, 0.135-0.387).Incidental findings in brain MRI and findings with potential clinical significance are both common in the general pediatric population. By assessing IFs and concurrent developmental and health measures and following these findings over the longitudinal study course, the ABCD study has the potential to determine the significance of many common IFs.