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Prognostic value of different discretization parameters in 18fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography radiomics of oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma.
Riley, Breylon A; Stevens, Jack B; Li, Xiang; Yang, Zhenyu; Wang, Chunhao; Mowery, Yvonne M; Brizel, David M; Yin, Fang-Fang; Lafata, Kyle J.
Affiliation
  • Riley BA; Duke University, Medical Physics Graduate Program, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
  • Stevens JB; Duke University, Department of Radiation Oncology, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
  • Li X; Duke University, Medical Physics Graduate Program, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
  • Yang Z; Duke University, Department of Radiation Oncology, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
  • Wang C; Duke University Pratt School of Engineering, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
  • Mowery YM; Duke University, Medical Physics Graduate Program, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
  • Brizel DM; Duke University, Department of Radiation Oncology, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
  • Yin FF; Duke University, Medical Physics Graduate Program, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
  • Lafata KJ; Duke University, Department of Radiation Oncology, Durham, North Carolina, United States.
J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ; 11(2): 024007, 2024 Mar.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38549835
ABSTRACT

Purpose:

We aim to interrogate the role of positron emission tomography (PET) image discretization parameters on the prognostic value of radiomic features in patients with oropharyngeal cancer.

Approach:

A prospective clinical trial (NCT01908504) enrolled patients with oropharyngeal squamous cell carcinoma (N=69; mixed HPV status) undergoing definitive radiotherapy and evaluated intra-treatment 18fluorodeoxyglucose PET as a potential imaging biomarker of early metabolic response. The primary tumor volume was manually segmented by a radiation oncologist on PET/CT images acquired two weeks into treatment (20 Gy). From this, 54 radiomic texture features were extracted. Two image discretization techniques-fixed bin number (FBN) and fixed bin size (FBS)-were considered to evaluate systematic changes in the bin number ({32, 64, 128, 256} gray levels) and bin size ({0.10, 0.15, 0.22, 0.25} bin-widths). For each discretization-specific radiomic feature space, an LASSO-regularized logistic regression model was independently trained to predict residual and/or recurrent disease. The model training was based on Monte Carlo cross-validation with a 20% testing hold-out, 50 permutations, and minor-class up-sampling to account for imbalanced outcomes data. Performance differences among the discretization-specific models were quantified via receiver operating characteristic curve analysis. A final parameter-optimized logistic regression model was developed by incorporating different settings parameterizations into the same model.

Results:

FBN outperformed FBS in predicting residual and/or recurrent disease. The four FBN models achieved AUC values of 0.63, 0.61, 0.65, and 0.62 for 32, 64, 128, and 256 gray levels, respectively. By contrast, the average AUC of the four FBS models was 0.53. The parameter-optimized model, comprising features joint entropy (FBN = 64) and information measure correlation 1 (FBN = 128), achieved an AUC of 0.70. Kaplan-Meier analyses identified these features to be associated with disease-free survival (p=0.0158 and p=0.0180, respectively; log-rank test).

Conclusions:

Our findings suggest that the prognostic value of individual radiomic features may depend on feature-specific discretization parameter settings.
Key words

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: J Med Imaging (Bellingham) Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: United States Country of publication: United States

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Language: En Journal: J Med Imaging (Bellingham) Year: 2024 Document type: Article Affiliation country: United States Country of publication: United States