MRI-derived radiomics to guide post-operative management of glioblastoma: Implication for personalized radiation treatment volume delineation

S Chiesa, R Russo, F Beghella Bartoli, I Palumbo, Giovanni Sabatino, M C Cannatà*, R Gigli, S Longo, H E Tran, Luca Boldrini, N Dinapoli, C Votta, D Cusumano, F Pignotti, M Lupattelli, F Camilli, Giuseppe Maria Della Pepa, Quintino Giorgio D'Alessandris, Alessandro Olivi, M BalducciC Colosimo, Maria Antonietta Gambacorta, V Valentini, C Aristei, Simona Gaudino

*Autore corrispondente per questo lavoro

Risultato della ricerca: Contributo in rivistaArticolo

Abstract

BackgroundThe glioblastoma's bad prognosis is primarily due to intra-tumor heterogeneity, demonstrated from several studies that collected molecular biology, cytogenetic data and more recently radiomic features for a better prognostic stratification. The GLIFA project (GLIoblastoma Feature Analysis) is a multicentric project planned to investigate the role of radiomic analysis in GB management, to verify if radiomic features in the tissue around the resection cavity may guide the radiation target volume delineation. Materials and methodsWe retrospectively analyze from three centers radiomic features extracted from 90 patients with total or near total resection, who completed the standard adjuvant treatment and for whom we had post-operative images available for features extraction. The Manual segmentation was performed on post gadolinium T1w MRI sequence by 2 radiation oncologists and reviewed by a neuroradiologist, both with at least 10 years of experience. The Regions of interest (ROI) considered for the analysis were: the surgical cavity +/- post-surgical residual mass (CTV_cavity); the CTV a margin of 1.5 cm added to CTV_cavity and the volume resulting from subtracting the CTV_cavity from the CTV was defined as CTV_Ring. Radiomic analysis and modeling were conducted in RStudio. Z-score normalization was applied to each radiomic feature. A radiomic model was generated using features extracted from the Ring to perform a binary classification and predict the PFS at 6 months. A 3-fold cross-validation repeated five times was implemented for internal validation of the model. ResultsTwo-hundred and seventy ROIs were contoured. The proposed radiomic model was given by the best fitting logistic regression model, and included the following 3 features: F_cm_merged.contrast, F_cm_merged.info.corr.2, F_rlm_merged.rlnu. A good agreement between model predicted probabilities and observed outcome probabilities was obtained (p-value of 0.49 by Hosmer and Lemeshow statistical test). The ROC curve of the model reported an AUC of 0.78 (95% CI: 0.68-0.88). ConclusionThis is the first hypothesis-generating study which applies a radiomic analysis focusing on healthy tissue ring around the surgical cavity on post-operative MRI. This study provides a preliminary model for a decision support tool for a customization of the radiation target volume in GB patients in order to achieve a margin reduction strategy.
Lingua originaleInglese
pagine (da-a)1059712-N/A
RivistaFrontiers in Medicine
Volume10
Numero di pubblicazione2023
DOI
Stato di pubblicazionePubblicato - 2023

All Science Journal Classification (ASJC) codes

  • Medicina Generale

Keywords

  • glioblastoma
  • heterogeneity
  • precision medicine
  • radiomic
  • target volume definition

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