Abstract
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Co-occurrence of local anisotropic gradient orientations (COLLAGE) is a recently developed radiomic (computer extracted) feature that captures entropy (measures the degree of disorder) in pixel-level edge directions and was previously shown to distinguish predominant cerebral radiation necrosis from recurrent tumor on gadolinium-contrast T1WI. In this work, we sought to investigate whether COLLAGE measurements from posttreatment gadolinium-contrast T1WI could distinguish varying extents of cerebral radiation necrosis and recurrent tumor classes in a lesion across primary and metastatic brain tumors.
MATERIALS AND METHODS: On a total of 75 gadolinium-contrast T1WI studies obtained from patients with primary and metastatic brain tumors and nasopharyngeal carcinoma, the extent of cerebral radiation necrosis and recurrent tumor in every brain lesion was histopathologically defined by an expert neuropathologist as the following: 1) “pure” cerebral radiation necrosis; 2) “mixed” pathology with coexistence of cerebral radiation necrosis and recurrent tumors; 3) “predominant” (>80%) cerebral radiation necrosis; 4) predominant (>80%) recurrent tumor; and 5) pure tumor. COLLAGE features were extracted from the expert-annotated ROIs on MR imaging. Statistical comparisons of COLLAGE measurements using first-order statistics were performed across pure, mixed, and predominant pathologies of cerebral radiation necrosis and recurrent tumor using the Wilcoxon rank sum test.
RESULTS: COLLAGE features exhibited decreased skewness for patients with pure (0.15 ± 0.12) and predominant cerebral radiation necrosis (0.25 ± 0.09) and were statistically significantly different (P < .05) from those in patients with predominant recurrent tumors, which had highly skewed (0.42 ± 0.21) COLLAGE values. COLLAGE values for the mixed pathology studies were found to lie between predominant cerebral radiation necrosis and recurrent tumor categories.
CONCLUSIONS: With additional independent multisite validation, COLLAGE measurements might enable noninvasive characterization of the degree of recurrent tumor or cerebral radiation necrosis in gadolinium-contrast T1WI of posttreatment lesions.
ABBREVIATIONS:
- COLLAGE
- co-occurrence of local anisotropic gradient orientations
- CRN
- cerebral radiation necrosis
- Gd-C
- gadolinium-contrast
- RT
- recurrent tumor
- TCIA
- The Cancer Imaging Archive
Footnotes
Disclosures: Leo Wolansky—UNRELATED: Other: Guerbet grant to the University of Connecticut.* Anant Madabhushi—UNRELATED: Board Membership: Inspirata; Consultancy: Inspirata; Grants/Grants Pending: Inspirata, PathCore, Comments: involved in 3 National Cancer Institute grants with Inspirata and 1 U24 grant (National Cancer Institute) with PathCore*; Patents (Planned, Pending, or Issued): Patents are licensed to Inspirata through Rutgers and Case Western*; Royalties: Royalties are paid out to Case Western and Rutgers by Inspirata and Elucid Bioimaging*; Stock/Stock Options: Elucid Bioimaging, Inspirata. Pallavi Tiwari—RELATED: Grant: The Dana Foundation, Ohio Third Frontier, I Corps.* *Money paid to the institution.
This work was supported by the National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health under award Nos. 1U24CA199374–01, R21CA179327–01, R21CA195152–01; the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases under award No. R01DK098503–02; the Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Synergistic Idea Development Award (PC120857); the Department of Defense Lung Cancer Idea Development New Investigator Award (LC130463); the DOD Prostate Cancer Idea Development Award (W81XWH-15-1-0558); the Case Comprehensive Cancer Center Pilot Grant, VelaSano Grant, from the Cleveland Clinic; and the Wallace H. Coulter Foundation Program in the Department of Biomedical Engineering at Case Western Reserve University.
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- © 2019 by American Journal of Neuroradiology
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