Abstract
BackgroundLow-grade gliomas cause significant neurological morbidity by brain invasion. There is no universally accepted objective technique available for detection of enlargement of low-grade gliomas in the clinical setting; subjective evaluation by clinicians using visual comparison of longitudinal radiological studies is the gold standard. The aim of this study is to determine whether a computer-assisted diagnosis (CAD) method helps physicians detect earlier growth of low-grade gliomas.Methods and findingsWe reviewed 165 patients diagnosed with grade 2 gliomas, seen at the University of Alabama at Birmingham clinics from 1 July 2017 to 14 May 2018. MRI scans were collected during the spring and summer of 2018. Fifty-six gliomas met the inclusion criteria, including 19 oligodendrogliomas, 26 astrocytomas, and 11 mixed gliomas in 30 males and 26 females with a mean age of 48 years and a range of follow-up of 150.2 months (difference between highest and lowest values). None received radiation therapy. We also studied 7 patients with an imaging abnormality without pathological diagnosis, who were clinically stable at the time of retrospective review (14 May 2018). This study compared growth detection by 7 physicians aided by the CAD method with retrospective clinical reports. The tumors of 63 patients (56 + 7) in 627 MRI scans were digitized, including 34 grade 2 gliomas with radiological progression and 22 radiologically stable grade 2 gliomas. The CAD method consisted of tumor segmentation, computing volumes, and pointing to growth by the online abrupt change-of-point method, which considers only past measurements. Independent scientists have evaluated the segmentation method. In 29 of the 34 patients with progression, the median time to growth detection was only 14 months for CAD compared to 44 months for current standard of care radiological evaluation (p < 0.001). Using CAD, accurate detection of tumor enlargement was possible with a median of only 57% change in the tumor volume as compared to a median of 174% change of volume necessary to diagnose tumor growth using standard of care clinical methods (p < 0.001). In the radiologically stable group, CAD facilitated growth detection in 13 out of 22 patients. CAD did not detect growth in the imaging abnormality group. The main limitation of this study was its retrospective design; nevertheless, the results depict the current state of a gold standard in clinical practice that allowed a significant increase in tumor volumes from baseline before detection. Such large increases in tumor volume would not be permitted in a prospective design. The number of glioma patients (n = 56) is a limitation; however, it is equivalent to the number of patients in phase II clinical trials.ConclusionsThe current practice of visual comparison of longitudinal MRI scans is associated with significant delays in detecting growth of low-grade gliomas. Our findings support the idea that physicians aided by CAD detect growth at significantly smaller volumes than physicians using visual comparison alone. This study does not answer the questions whether to treat or not and which treatment modality is optimal. Nonetheless, early growth detection sets the stage for future clinical studies that address these questions and whether early therapeutic interventions prolong survival and improve quality of life.
Highlights
Cancer patients are typically monitored with serial imaging of the affected organ; timely detection of tumor recurrence can have profound implications for morbidity and survival
The current practice of visual comparison of longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans is associated with significant delays in detecting growth of low-grade gliomas
Our findings support the idea that physicians aided by computer-assisted diagnosis (CAD) detect growth at significantly smaller volumes than physicians using visual comparison alone
Summary
Cancer patients are typically monitored with serial imaging of the affected organ; timely detection of tumor recurrence can have profound implications for morbidity and survival. Patients diagnosed with low-grade gliomas are followed by serial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain. Low-grade gliomas may be treated by surgery, with or without radiation or chemotherapy [5,6,7]. Some studies have reported a correlation between radiation therapy and cognitive impairment in patients with low-grade gliomas [15,16]; a recent European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer study found no difference in global cognition in patients treated by radiotherapy versus chemotherapy [17]. At the time of growth detection, low-grade gliomas may remain at the same grade or could have transformed to higher grades [18]; they may again be treated by surgery with or without radiation therapy and chemotherapy [19,20]. The aim of this study is to determine whether a computer-assisted diagnosis (CAD) method helps physicians detect earlier growth of low-grade gliomas
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