Eleonora BicciĀ¹, Cosimo NardiĀ¹, Leonardo CalamandreiĀ¹, Eleonora BarcaliĀ¹
Background
Identifying MRI texture parameters able to distinguish inflammation, fibrosis, and residual cancer in patients with naso-oropharynx carcinoma after radiochemotherapy (RT-CHT).
Material and method
In this single-centre, observational, retrospective study, texture analysis was performed on ADC maps and post-gadolinium T1 images of patients with histological diagnosis of naso-oropharyngeal carcinoma treated with RT-CHT. An initial cohort of 99 patients was selected; 57 of them were later excluded. The final cohort of 42 patients was divided into 3 groups (inflammation, fibrosis, and residual cancer) according to MRI, 18F-FDG-PET/CT performed 3ā4Ā months after RT-CHT, and biopsy. Pre-RT-CHT lesions and the corresponding anatomic area post-RT-CHT were segmented with 3D slicer software from which 107 textural features were derived. T-Student and Wilcoxon signed-rank tests were performed, and features withĀ p-valueā<ā0.01 were considered statistically significant. Cut-off valuesāobtained by ROC curvesāto discriminate post-RT-CHT non-tumoural changes from residual cancer were calculated for the parameters statistically associated to the diseased status at follow-up.
Results
Two featuresāEnergy and Grey Level Non-Uniformityāwere statistically significant on T1 images in the comparison between āpositiveā (residual cancer) and ānegativeā patients (inflammation and fibrosis). Energy was also found to be statistically significant in both patients with fibrosis and residual cancer. Grey Level Non-Uniformity was significant in the differentiation between residual cancer and inflammation. Five features were statistically significant on ADC maps in the differentiation between āpositiveā and ānegativeā patients. The reduction in values of such features between pre- and post-RT-CHT was correlated with a good response to therapy.
Conclusions
Texture analysis on post-gadolinium T1 images and ADC maps can differentiate residual cancer from fibrosis and inflammation in early follow-up of naso-oropharyngeal carcinoma treated with RT-CHT.
Keywords: RT-CH, structure analysis, MRI