학술논문

Contrast Agent Dynamics Determine Radiomics Profiles in Oncologic Imaging.
Document Type
Article
Source
Cancers. Apr2024, Vol. 16 Issue 8, p1519. 17p.
Subject
*RECEIVER operating characteristic curves
*RESEARCH funding
*RADIOMICS
*LOGISTIC regression analysis
*COMPUTED tomography
*PROSTATE tumors
*CANCER patients
*MAGNETIC resonance imaging
*RETROSPECTIVE studies
*PATIENT-centered care
*LUNG tumors
*MACHINE learning
*LUNG cancer
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*CONTRAST media
Language
ISSN
2072-6694
Abstract
Simple Summary: Radiomics is the extraction of high-dimensional quantitative features from medical images. These features have shown potential to provide diagnostic and prognostic information in various oncological settings, but their reproducibility and stability can be affected by multiple physiological and technical factors. In this study, we assessed the effect of contrast agent timing on radiomics features using dynamic contrast-enhanced CT or MRI in prostate and lung cancers, whereby multiple images are acquired with a high temporal resolution after contrast agent application. We observed that a substantial number of radiomics features are contrast perfusion dependent and prone to bias. Therefore, when using contrast-enhanced scans for radiomics studies, patient-specific perfusion timing (e.g., test bolus protocol) should be applied. Background: The reproducibility of radiomics features extracted from CT and MRI examinations depends on several physiological and technical factors. The aim was to evaluate the impact of contrast agent timing on the stability of radiomics features using dynamic contrast-enhanced perfusion CT (dceCT) or MRI (dceMRI) in prostate and lung cancers. Methods: Radiomics features were extracted from dceCT or dceMRI images in patients with biopsy-proven peripheral prostate cancer (pzPC) or biopsy-proven non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC), respectively. Features that showed significant differences between contrast phases were identified using linear mixed models. An L2-penalized logistic regression classifier was used to predict class labels for pzPC and unaffected prostate regions-of-interest (ROIs). Results: Nine pzPC and 28 NSCLC patients, who were imaged with dceCT and/or dceMRI, were included in this study. After normalizing for individual enhancement patterns by defining seven individual phases based on a reference vessel, 19, 467 and 128 out of 1204 CT features showed significant temporal dynamics in healthy prostate parenchyma, prostate tumors and lung tumors, respectively. CT radiomics-based classification accuracy of healthy and tumor ROIs was highly dependent on contrast agent phase. For dceMRI, 899 and 1027 out of 1118 features were significantly dependent on time after contrast agent injection for prostate and lung tumors. Conclusions: CT and MRI radiomics features in both prostate and lung tumors are significantly affected by interindividual differences in contrast agent dynamics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]