4.7 Article

Radiomic features from dynamic susceptibility contrast perfusion-weighted imaging improve the three-class prediction of molecular subtypes in patients with adult diffuse gliomas

Journal

EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00330-023-09459-6

Keywords

Glioma; Isocitrate dehydrogenase; Magnetic resonance imaging; Machine learning; Perfusion

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Radiomic features extracted from DSC-PWI can improve the prediction of molecular subtypes in adult diffuse gliomas. Integrating radiomic features from conventional and perfusion MRI can lead to the development of a multimodal radiomic model. Adding DSC-PWI to conventional MRI improves molecular subtype prediction in diffuse gliomas.
ObjectivesTo investigate whether radiomic features extracted from dynamic susceptibility contrast perfusion-weighted imaging (DSC-PWI) can improve the prediction of the molecular subtypes of adult diffuse gliomas, and to further develop and validate a multimodal radiomic model by integrating radiomic features from conventional and perfusion MRI.MethodsWe extracted 1197 radiomic features from each sequence of conventional MRI and DSC-PWI, respectively. The Boruta algorithm was used for feature selection and combination, and a three-class random forest method was applied to construct the models. We also constructed a combined model by integrating radiomic features and clinical metrics. The models' diagnostic performance for discriminating the molecular subtypes (IDH wild type [IDHwt], IDH mutant and 1p/19q-noncodeleted [IDHmut-noncodel], and IDH mutant and 1p/19q-codeleted [IDHmut-codel]) was compared using AUCs in the validation set.ResultsWe included 272 patients (training set, n = 166; validation set, n = 106) with grade II-IV gliomas (mean age, 48.7 years; range, 19-77 years). The proportions of the molecular subtypes were 66.2% IDHwt, 15.1% IDHmut-noncodel, and 18.8% IDHmut-codel. Nineteen radiomic features (13 from conventional MRI and 6 from DSC-PWI) were selected to build the multimodal radiomic model. In the validation set, the multimodal radiomic model showed better performance than the conventional radiomic model did in predicting the IDHwt and IDHmut-codel subtypes, which was comparable to the conventional radiomic model in predicting the IDHmut-noncodel subtype. The multimodal radiomic model yielded similar performance as the combined model in predicting the three molecular subtypes.ConclusionsAdding DSC-PWI to conventional MRI can improve molecular subtype prediction in patients with diffuse gliomas.

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