RESUMO
Purpose: Analysis of FLAIR MRI sequences is gaining momentum in brain maturation studies, and this study aimed to establish normative developmental curves for FLAIR texture biomarkers in the paediatric brain. Methods: A retrospective, single-centre dataset of 465/512 healthy paediatric FLAIR volumes was used, with one pathological volume for proof-of-concept. Participants were included if the MRI was unremarkable as determined by a neuroradiologist. An automated intensity normalization algorithm was used to standardize FLAIR signal intensity across MRI scanners and individuals. FLAIR texture biomarkers were extracted from grey matter (GM), white matter (WM), deep GM, and cortical GM regions. Sex-specific percentile curves were reported and modelled for each tissue type. Correlations between texture and established biomarkers including intensity volume were examined. Biomarkers from the pathological volume were extracted to demonstrate clinical utility of normative curves. Results: This study analyzed 465 FLAIR sequences in children and adolescents (mean age 10.65 ± 4.22 years, range 2-19 years, 220 males, 245 females). In the WM, texture increased to a maximum at around 8 to 10 years, with different trends between females and males in adolescence. In the GM, texture increased over the age range while demonstrating a local maximum at 8 to 10 years. Texture had an inverse relationship with intensity in the WM across all ages. WM and edema in a pathological brain exhibited abnormal texture values outside of the normative growth curves. Conclusion: Normative curves for texture biomarkers in FLAIR sequences may be used to assess brain maturation and microstructural changes over the paediatric age range.