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Differences in Radiomics Signatures Between Patients with Early and Advanced T-Stage Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Facilitate Prognostication

Authors :
Annan Dong
Yuanzhi Shao
Lizhi Liu
Li Tian
Haojiang Li
Shuangshuang Wu
Guangying Ruan
Source :
Journal of magnetic resonance imaging : JMRIReferences. 54(3)
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background Accurately predicting the risk of death, recurrence, and metastasis of patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is potentially important for personalized diagnosis and treatment. Survival outcomes of patients vary greatly in distinct stages of NPC. Prognostic models of stratified patients may aid in prognostication. Purpose To explore the prognostic performance of MRI-based radiomics signatures in stratified patients with NPC. Study type Retrospective. Population Seven hundred and seventy-eight patients with NPC (T1-2 stage: 298, T3-4 stage: 480; training cohort: 525, validation cohort: 253). Field strength/sequence Fast-spin echo (FSE) axial T1-weighted images, FSE axial T2-weighted images, contrast-enhanced FSE axial T1-weighted images at 1.5 T or 3.0 T. Assessment Radiomics signatures, clinical nomograms, and radiomics nomograms combining the radiomic score (Radscore) and clinical factors for predicting progression-free survival (PFS) were constructed on T1-2 stage patient cohort (A), T3-4 stage patient cohort (B), and the entire dataset (C). Statistical tests Least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO) method was applied for radiomics modeling. Harrell's concordance indices (C-index) were employed to evaluate the predictive power of each model. Results Among 4,410 MRI-extracted features, we selected 16, 16, and 14 radiomics features most relevant to PFS for Models A, B, and C, respectively. Only 0, 1, and 4 features were found overlapped between models A/B, A/C, and B/C, respectively. Radiomics signatures constructed on T1-2 stage and T3-4 stage patients yielded C-indices of 0.820 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.763-0.877) and 0.726 (0.687-0.765), respectively, which were larger than those on the entire validation cohort (0.675 [0.637-0.713]). Radiomics nomograms combining Radscore and clinical factors achieved significantly better performance than clinical nomograms (P Data conclusion The selected radiomics features and prognostic performance of radiomics signatures differed per the type of NPC patients incorporated into the models. Radiomics models based on pre-stratified tumor stages had better prognostic performance than those on unstratified dataset. Level of evidence 4 Technical Efficacy Stage: 5.

Details

ISSN :
15222586
Volume :
54
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of magnetic resonance imaging : JMRIReferences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....925e8e09798dec309ebcf655f74d158e