Abstract

To investigate the predictive value of peritoneal carcinomatosis (PC) quantification by DWI in determining incomplete tumour debulking in ovarian carcinoma (OC). Prospective patients with suspected stage III-IV or recurrent OC were recruited for DWI before surgery. PC on DWI was segmented semi-automatically by k-means clustering, retaining voxels with intermediate apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) to quantify PC burden. A scoring system, functional peritoneal cancer index (fPCI), was proposed based on the segmentation of tumour volume in 13 abdominopelvic regions with additional point given to involvement of critical sites. ADC of the largest PC was recorded. The surgical complexity and outcomes (complete vs. incomplete tumour debulking) were documented. fPCI was correlated with surgical PCI (sPCI), surgical complexity, and its ability to predict incomplete tumour debulking. Fifty-three patients with stage III-IV or recurrent OC were included with a mean age of 56.1 ± 11.8years old. Complete tumour debulking was achieved in 38/53 patients (71.7%). Significant correlation was found between fPCI and sPCI (r > 0.757, p < 0.001). Patients with high-fPCI (fPCI ≥ 6) had a high surgical complexity score (p = 0.043) with 84.2% received radical or supra-radical surgery. The mean fPCI was significantly higher in patients with incomplete tumour debulking than in those with complete debulking (10.27 vs. 4.71, p < 0.001). fPCI/ADC combined with The International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics stage achieved 92.5% accuracy in predicting incomplete tumour debulking (AUC 0.947). DWI-derived fPCI offered a semi-automated estimation of PC burden. fPCI/ADC could predict the likelihood of incomplete tumour debulking with high accuracy. • Functional peritoneal cancer index (fPCI) derived from DWI offered a semi-automated estimation of tumour burden in ovarian carcinoma. • fPCI was highly correlated with surgical PCI (sPCI). • fPCI/ADC could predict the likelihood of incomplete tumour debulking with high accuracy.

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