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Prediction of radiation-induced hypothyroidism using radiomic data analysis does not show superiority over standard normal tissue complication models

Authors :
Zuzanna Nowicka
Jacek Fijuth
Wojciech Fendler
Bartłomiej Tomasik
Anna Papis-Ubych
Robert Bibik
Urszula Smyczynska
Tomasz Rutkowski
Szymon Grabia
Tomasz Latusek
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

State-of-art normal tissue complication probability (NTCP) models do not take into account more complex individual anatomical variations, which can be objectively quantitated and compared in radiomic analysis. The goal of this project was development of radiomic NTCP model for radiation-induced hypothyroidism (RIHT) using imaging biomarkers (radiomics). We gathered CT images and clinical data from 98 patients, who underwent intensity-modulated radiation therapy (IMRT) for head and neck cancers with a planned total dose of 70.0 Gy (33–35 fractions). During the 28-month (median) follow-up 27 patients (28%) developed RIHT. For each patient, we extracted 1316 radiomic features from original and transformed images using manually contoured thyroid masks. Creating models based on clinical, radiomic features or a combination thereof, we considered 3 variants of data preprocessing. Based on their performance metrics (sensitivity, specificity), we picked best models for each variant ((0.8, 0.96), (0.9, 0.93), (0.9, 0.89) variant-wise) and compared them with external NTCP models ((0.82, 0.88), (0.82, 0.88), (0.76, 0.91)). Our models reach accuracy comparable with or better than previously presented non-radiomic NTCP models. The benefit of our approach is obtaining the RIHT predictions before treatment planning to adjust IMRT plan to avoid the thyroid region in most susceptible patients.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........f2b838dfda18adeedbc667030c007e75
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.09.23.21264007