Abstract

Background and purposeRadiomics is a high-throughput approach that allows for quantitative analysis of imaging data for prognostic applications. Medical images are used in oropharyngeal cancer (OPC) diagnosis and treatment planning and these images may contain prognostic information allowing for treatment personalization. However, the lack of validated models has been a barrier to the translation of radiomic research to the clinic. We hypothesize that a previously developed radiomics model for risk stratification in OPC can be validated in a local dataset. Materials and methodsThe radiomics signature predicting overall survival incorporates features derived from the primary gross tumor volume of OPC patients treated with radiation +/- chemotherapy at a single institution (n = 343). Model fit, calibration, discrimination, and utility were evaluated. The signature was compared with a clinical model using overall stage and a model incorporating both radiomics and clinical data. A model detecting dental artifacts on computed tomography images was also validated. ResultsThe radiomics signature had a Concordance index (C-index) of 0.66 comparable to the clinical model’s C-index of 0.65. The combined model significantly outperformed (C-index of 0.69, p = 0.024) the clinical model, suggesting that radiomics provides added value. The dental artifact model demonstrated strong ability in detecting dental artifacts with an area under the curve of 0.87. ConclusionThis work demonstrates model performance comparable to previous validation work and provides a framework for future independent and multi-center validation efforts. With sufficient validation, radiomic models have the potential to improve traditional systems of risk stratification, treatment personalization and patient outcomes.

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