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Evaluation of Simulated Lesions as Surrogates to Clinical Lesions for Thoracic CT Volumetry: The Results of an International Challenge.
Robins, Marthony; Kalpathy-Cramer, Jayashree; Obuchowski, Nancy A; Buckler, Andrew; Athelogou, Maria; Jarecha, Rudresh; Petrick, Nicholas; Pezeshk, Aria; Sahiner, Berkman; Samei, Ehsan.
Affiliation
  • Robins M; Carl E. Ravin Advanced Imaging Laboratories, Medical Physics Graduate Program, Duke University Medical Center, 2424 Erwin Road, Suite 302, Durham, NC 27705. Electronic address: marthony.robins@duke.edu.
  • Kalpathy-Cramer J; Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts.
  • Obuchowski NA; Cleveland Clinic Foundation, Cleveland, Ohio.
  • Buckler A; Elucid Bioimaging Inc., Wenham, Massachusetts.
  • Athelogou M; Definiens AG, München, Germany.
  • Jarecha R; PAREXEL Informatics, Billerica, Massachusetts.
  • Petrick N; Center for Devices and Radiological Health, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland.
  • Pezeshk A; Center for Devices and Radiological Health, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland.
  • Sahiner B; Center for Devices and Radiological Health, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland.
  • Samei E; Carl E. Ravin Advanced Imaging Laboratories, Medical Physics Graduate Program, Duke University Medical Center, 2424 Erwin Road, Suite 302, Durham, NC 27705.
Acad Radiol ; 26(7): e161-e173, 2019 07.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30219290
ABSTRACT
RATIONALE AND

OBJECTIVES:

To evaluate a new approach to establish compliance of segmentation tools with the computed tomography volumetry profile of the Quantitative Imaging Biomarker Alliance (QIBA); and determine the statistical exchangeability between real and simulated lesions through an international challenge. MATERIALS AND

METHODS:

The study used an anthropomorphic phantom with 16 embedded physical lesions and 30 patient cases from the Reference Image Database to Evaluate Therapy Response with pathologically confirmed malignancies. Hybrid datasets were generated by virtually inserting simulated lesions corresponding to physical lesions into the phantom datasets using one projection-domain-based method (Method 1), two image-domain insertion methods (Methods 2 and 3), and simulated lesions corresponding to real lesions into the Reference Image Database to Evaluate Therapy Response dataset (using Method 2). The volumes of the real and simulated lesions were compared based on bias (measured mean volume differences between physical and virtually inserted lesions in phantoms as quantified by segmentation algorithms), repeatability, reproducibility, equivalence (phantom phase), and overall QIBA compliance (phantom and clinical phase).

RESULTS:

For phantom phase, three of eight groups were fully QIBA compliant, and one was marginally compliant. For compliant groups, the estimated biases were -1.8 ± 1.4%, -2.5 ± 1.1%, -3 ± 1%, -1.8 ± 1.5% (±95% confidence interval). No virtual insertion method showed statistical equivalence to physical insertion in bias equivalence testing using Schuirmann's two one-sided test (±5% equivalence margin). Differences in repeatability and reproducibility across physical and simulated lesions were largely comparable (0.1%-16% and 7%-18% differences, respectively). For clinical phase, 7 of 16 groups were QIBA compliant.

CONCLUSION:

Hybrid datasets yielded conclusions similar to real computed tomography datasets where phantom QIBA compliant was also compliant for hybrid datasets. Some groups deemed compliant for simulated methods, not for physical lesion measurements. The magnitude of this difference was small (<5.4%). While technical performance is not equivalent, they correlate, such that, volumetrically simulated lesions could potentially serve as practical proxies.
Subject(s)
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Cone-Beam Computed Tomography / Lung Neoplasms Type of study: Clinical_trials Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Acad Radiol Journal subject: RADIOLOGIA Year: 2019 Type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Cone-Beam Computed Tomography / Lung Neoplasms Type of study: Clinical_trials Limits: Humans Language: En Journal: Acad Radiol Journal subject: RADIOLOGIA Year: 2019 Type: Article