Abstract

ObjectivesTo quantify the dose-response relationship of changes in pelvic bone marrow (PBM) functional MR radiomic features (RF) during concurrent chemoradiotherapy (CCRT) for patients with cervical cancer and establish the correlation with hematologic toxicity to provide a basis for PBM sparing.MethodsA total of 54 cervical cancer patients who received CCRT were studied retrospectively. Patients underwent MRI IDEAL IQ and T2 fat suppression (T2fs) scanning pre- and post-CCRT. The PBM RFs were extracted from each region of interest at dose gradients of 5–10 Gy, 10–15 Gy, 15–20 Gy, 20–30 Gy, 30–40 Gy, 40–50 Gy, and > 50 Gy, and changes in peripheral blood cell (PBC) counts during radiotherapy were assessed. The dose-response relationship of RF changes and their correlation with PBC changes were investigated.ResultsWhite blood cell, neutrophils (ANC) and lymphocyte counts during treatment were decreased by 49.4%, 41.4%, and 76.3%, respectively. Most firstorder features exhibited a significant dose-response relationship, particularly FatFrac IDEAL IQ, which had a maximum dose-response curve slope of 10.09, and WATER IDEAL IQ had a slope of − 7.93. The firstorder-Range in FAT IDEAL IQ and firstorder-10Percentile in T2fs, showed a significant correlation between the changes in ANC counts under the low dose gradient of 5–10 Gy (r = 0.744, -0.654, respectively, p < 0.05).ConclusionFunctional MR radiomics can detect microscopic changes in PBM at various dose gradients and provide an objective reference for bone marrow sparing and dose limitation in cervical cancer CCRT.

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