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Ultrasound-guided targeted biopsies of CT-based radiomic tumour habitats: technical development and initial experience in metastatic ovarian cancer

Authors :
Stephan Ursprung
Tristan Lawton
Mercedes Jimenez-Linan
Florian Markowetz
Ramona Woitek
Lucian Beer
Paula Martin-Gonzalez
Ionut-Gabriel Funingana
Helen Addley
James D. Brenton
Joo-Ern Ang
Sally Davey
Hilal Sahin
Evis Sala
Maria Delgado-Ortet
Mireia Crispin-Ortuzar
Gaurav Phadke
Nghia Q. Nguyen
Leonardo Rundo
Lorena Escudero
Marika Reinius
Brenton, James D. [0000-0002-5738-6683]
Sala, Evis [0000-0002-5518-9360]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Brenton, James D [0000-0002-5738-6683]
Source :
European Radiology
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2020.

Abstract

Funder: Horizon 2020; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100007601<br />Funder: Cancer Research UK<br />Funder: Mark Foundation For Cancer Research; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100014599<br />Purpose: To develop a precision tissue sampling technique that uses computed tomography (CT)–based radiomic tumour habitats for ultrasound (US)-guided targeted biopsies that can be integrated in the clinical workflow of patients with high-grade serous ovarian cancer (HGSOC). Methods: Six patients with suspected HGSOC scheduled for US-guided biopsy before starting neoadjuvant chemotherapy were included in this prospective study from September 2019 to February 2020. The tumour segmentation was performed manually on the pre-biopsy contrast-enhanced CT scan. Spatial radiomic maps were used to identify tumour areas with similar or distinct radiomic patterns, and tumour habitats were identified using the Gaussian mixture modelling. CT images with superimposed habitat maps were co-registered with US images by means of a landmark-based rigid registration method for US-guided targeted biopsies. The dice similarity coefficient (DSC) was used to assess the tumour-specific CT/US fusion accuracy. Results: We successfully co-registered CT-based radiomic tumour habitats with US images in all patients. The median time between CT scan and biopsy was 21 days (range 7–30 days). The median DSC for tumour-specific CT/US fusion accuracy was 0.53 (range 0.79 to 0.37). The CT/US fusion accuracy was high for the larger pelvic tumours (DSC: 0.76–0.79) while it was lower for the smaller omental metastases (DSC: 0.37–0.53). Conclusion: We developed a precision tissue sampling technique that uses radiomic habitats to guide in vivo biopsies using CT/US fusion and that can be seamlessly integrated in the clinical routine for patients with HGSOC. Key Points: • We developed a prevision tissue sampling technique that co-registers CT-based radiomics–based tumour habitats with US images. • The CT/US fusion accuracy was high for the larger pelvic tumours (DSC: 0.76–0.79) while it was lower for the smaller omental metastases (DSC: 0.37–0.53).

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Radiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e63e1d6af5be1c089ff88ef3db599b2f