Receive a weekly summary and discussion of the top papers of the week by leading researchers in the field.

In Quantitative imaging in medicine and surgery

Background : Radiomics promises to enhance the discriminative performance for clinically significant prostate cancer (csPCa), but still lacks validation in real-life scenarios. This study investigates the classification performance and robustness of machine learning radiomics models in heterogeneous MRI datasets to characterize suspicious prostate lesions for non-invasive prediction of prostate cancer (PCa) aggressiveness compared to conventional imaging biomarkers.

Methods : A total of 142 patients with clinical suspicion of PCa underwent 1.5T or 3T biparametric MRI (7 scanner types, 14 institutions) and exhibited suspicious lesions [prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS) score ≥3] in peripheral or transitional zones. Whole-gland and index-lesion segmentations were performed semi-automatically. A total of 1,482 quantitative morphologic, shape, texture, and intensity-based radiomics features were extracted from T2-weighted and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC)-images and assessed using random forest and logistic regression models. Five-fold cross-validation performance in terms of area under the ROC curve was compared to mean ADC (mADC), PI-RADS and prostate-specific antigen density (PSAD). Bias mitigation techniques targeting the high-dimensional feature space and inherent class imbalance were applied and robustness of results was systematically evaluated.

Results : Trained models showed mean area under the curves (AUCs) ranging from 0.78 to 0.83 in csPCa classification. Despite using mitigation techniques, high performance variability of results could be demonstrated. Trained models achieved on average numerically higher classification performance compared to clinical parameters PI-RADS (AUC =0.78), mADC (AUC =0.71) and PSAD (AUC =0.63).

Conclusions : Radiomics models' classification performance of csPCa was numerically but not significantly higher than PI-RADS scoring. Overall, clinical applicability in heterogeneous MRI datasets is limited because of high variability of results. Performance variability, robustness and reproducibility of radiomics-based measures should be addressed more transparently in future research to enable broad clinical application.

Gresser Eva, Schachtner Balthasar, Stüber Anna Theresa, Solyanik Olga, Schreier Andrea, Huber Thomas, Froelich Matthias Frank, Magistro Giuseppe, Kretschmer Alexander, Stief Christian, Ricke Jens, Ingrisch Michael, Nörenberg Dominik

2022-Nov

Magnetic resonance imaging, imaging biomarker, prostate Imaging Reporting and Data System (PI-RADS), prostate cancer (PCa), radiomics