Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Ave, Wickenden 525, Cleveland, OH 44106.
Department of Biomedical Engineering, Case Western Reserve University, 10900 Euclid Ave, Wickenden 525, Cleveland, OH 44106.
Transl Oncol. 2016 Apr;9(2):155-162. doi: 10.1016/j.tranon.2016.01.008.
Studying early response to cancer treatment is significant for patient treatment stratification and follow-up. Although recent advances in positron emission tomography (PET) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allow for evaluation of tumor response, a quantitative objective assessment of treatment-related effects offers localization and quantification of structural and functional changes in the tumor region. Radiomics, the process of computerized extraction of features from radiographic images, is a new strategy for capturing subtle changes in the tumor region that works by quantifying subvisual patterns which might escape human identification. The goal of this study was to demonstrate feasibility for performing radiomics analysis on integrated PET/MRI to characterize early treatment response in metastatic renal cell carcinoma (RCC) undergoing sunitinib therapy. Two patients with advanced RCC were imaged using an integrated PET/MRI scanner. [18 F] fluorothymidine (FLT) was used as the PET radiotracer, which can measure the degree of cell proliferation. Image acquisitions included test/retest scans before sunitinib treatment and one scan 3 weeks into treatment using [18 F] FLT-PET, T2-weighted (T2w), and diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) protocols, where DWI yielded an apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) map. Our framework to quantitatively characterize treatment-related changes involved the following analytic steps: 1) intraacquisition and interacquisition registration of protocols to allow voxel-wise comparison of changes in radiomic features, 2) correction and pseudoquantification of T2w images to remove acquisition artifacts and examine tissue-specific response, 3) characterization of information captured by T2w MRI, FLT-PET, and ADC via radiomics, and 4) combining multiparametric information to create a map of integrated changes from PET/MRI radiomic features. Standardized uptake value (from FLT-PET) and ADC textures ranked highest for reproducibility in a test/retest evaluation as well as for capturing treatment response, in comparison to high variability seen in T2w MRI. The highest-ranked radiomic feature yielded a normalized percentage change of 63% within the RCC region and 17% in a spatially distinct normal region relative to its pretreatment value. By comparison, both the original and postprocessed T2w signal intensity appeared to be markedly less sensitive and specific to changes within the tumor. Our preliminary results thus suggest that radiomics analysis could be a powerful tool for characterizing treatment response in integrated PET/MRI.
研究癌症治疗的早期反应对于患者的治疗分层和随访具有重要意义。尽管正电子发射断层扫描(PET)和磁共振成像(MRI)的最新进展允许评估肿瘤反应,但对治疗相关效应的定量客观评估提供了肿瘤区域结构和功能变化的定位和量化。放射组学是从放射图像中提取特征的计算机化过程,是一种捕获肿瘤区域细微变化的新策略,其通过量化可能逃脱人类识别的亚视觉模式来工作。本研究的目的是展示在接受舒尼替尼治疗的转移性肾细胞癌(RCC)中,对整合的 PET/MRI 进行放射组学分析以表征早期治疗反应的可行性。对两名晚期 RCC 患者使用集成的 PET/MRI 扫描仪进行成像。[18F]氟胸腺嘧啶核苷(FLT)被用作 PET 示踪剂,可测量细胞增殖程度。图像采集包括舒尼替尼治疗前的测试/重复扫描,以及使用[18F]FLT-PET、T2 加权(T2w)和扩散加权成像(DWI)方案进行的一次扫描,其中 DWI 产生了表观扩散系数(ADC)图。我们用于定量表征治疗相关变化的框架涉及以下分析步骤:1)方案的内部和内部配准,以允许在体素水平上比较放射组学特征的变化,2)校正和伪量化 T2w 图像以消除采集伪影并检查组织特异性反应,3)通过放射组学描述 T2w MRI、FLT-PET 和 ADC 捕获的信息,4)将多参数信息结合起来,从 PET/MRI 放射组学特征创建综合变化图。与 T2w MRI 中所见的高变异性相比,在测试/重复评估中以及在捕获治疗反应方面,标准化摄取值(来自 FLT-PET)和 ADC 纹理的重现性排名最高。排名最高的放射组学特征在 RCC 区域内产生了 63%的归一化百分比变化,在空间上与预处理值相比,在空间上有 17%的差异。相比之下,原始和后处理的 T2w 信号强度似乎对肿瘤内的变化明显不敏感和特异性。因此,我们的初步结果表明,放射组学分析可能是在整合的 PET/MRI 中描述治疗反应的有力工具。