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Algorithm variability in the estimation of lung nodule volume from phantom CT scans: Results of the QIBA 3A public challenge

Authors :
Nancy A. Obuchowski
Emilio Vega
Gregory V. Goldmacher
Maria Athelogou
Hitoshi Yamagata
Rudresh Jarecha
Binsheng Zhao
Guillaume Orieux
Michael C. Bloom
Ninad Mantri
Luduan Zhang
Hyun J. Kim
Marios A. Gavrielides
Grzegorz Soza
Osama Masoud
Dirk Colditz Colditz
Yuhua Gu
Hubert Beaumont
Andrew J. Buckler
Ganesh Saiprasad
Jan Martin Kuhnigk
Adele P. Peskin
Robert J. Gillies
Jan Hendrik Moltz
Sam Peterson
Alden A. Dima
Nicholas Petrick
Estanislao Oubel
Tomoyuki Takeguchi
Yongqiang Tan
Christian Tietjen
Publica
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Rationale and Objectives Quantifying changes in lung tumor volume is important for diagnosis, therapy planning, and evaluation of response to therapy. The aim of this study was to assess the performance of multiple algorithms on a reference data set. The study was organized by the Quantitative Imaging Biomarker Alliance (QIBA). Materials and Methods The study was organized as a public challenge. Computed tomography scans of synthetic lung tumors in an anthropomorphic phantom were acquired by the Food and Drug Administration. Tumors varied in size, shape, and radiodensity. Participants applied their own semi-automated volume estimation algorithms that either did not allow or allowed post-segmentation correction (type 1 or 2, respectively). Statistical analysis of accuracy (percent bias) and precision (repeatability and reproducibility) was conducted across algorithms, as well as across nodule characteristics, slice thickness, and algorithm type. Results Eighty-four percent of volume measurements of QIBA-compliant tumors were within 15% of the true volume, ranging from 66% to 93% across algorithms, compared to 61% of volume measurements for all tumors (ranging from 37% to 84%). Algorithm type did not affect bias substantially; however, it was an important factor in measurement precision. Algorithm precision was notably better as tumor size increased, worse for irregularly shaped tumors, and on the average better for type 1 algorithms. Over all nodules meeting the QIBA Profile, precision, as measured by the repeatability coefficient, was 9.0% compared to 18.4% overall. Conclusion The results achieved in this study, using a heterogeneous set of measurement algorithms, support QIBA quantitative performance claims in terms of volume measurement repeatability for nodules meeting the QIBA Profile criteria.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....580ae9e28128401318397f70151bdaa5