Abstract

PurposeTo assess the day-to-day repeatability of global and local-regional magnetic resonance (MR) imaging texture features derived from primary rectal cancer.Materials and MethodsAfter ethical approval and patient informed consent were obtained, two pretreatment T2-weighted axial MR imaging studies performed prospectively with the same imaging unit on 2 consecutive days in 14 patients with rectal cancer (11 men [mean age, 61.7 years], three women [mean age, 70.0 years]) were analyzed to extract (a) global first-order statistical histogram and model-based fractal features reflecting the whole-tumor voxel intensity histogram distribution and repeating patterns, respectively, without spatial information and (b) local-regional second-order and high-order statistical texture features reflecting the intensity and spatial interrelationships between adjacent in-plane or multiplanar voxels or regions, respectively. Repeatability was assessed for 46 texture features, and mean difference, 95% limits of agreement, within-subject coefficient of variation (wCV), and repeatability coefficient (r) were recorded.ResultsRepeatability was better for global parameters than for most local-regional parameters. In particular, histogram mean, median, and entropy, fractal dimension mean and standard deviation, and second-order entropy, homogeneity, difference entropy, and inverse difference moment demonstrated good repeatability, with narrow limits of agreement and wCVs of 10% or lower. Repeatability was poorest for the following high-order gray-level run-length (GLRL) gray-level zone size matrix (GLZSM) and neighborhood gray-tone difference matrix (NGTDM) parameters: GLRL intensity variability, GLZSM short-zone emphasis, GLZSM intensity nonuniformity, GLZSM intensity variability, GLZSM size zone variability, and NGTDM complexity, demonstrating wider agreement limits and wCVs of 50% or greater.ConclusionMR imaging repeatability is better for global texture parameters than for local-regional texture parameters, indicating that global texture parameters should be sufficiently robust for clinical practice.Online supplemental material is available for this article.

Highlights

  • The mean differences, 95% limits of agreement, within-subject coefficient of variation (wCV), and repeatability coefficients for the 46 image texture parameters are summarized in Tables 2–8 for both observers

  • Repeatability was generally better for whole-tumor global parameters (Tables 2, 3) than for intratumoral local-regional parameters, with the exception of first-order skewness, kurtosis, fractal lacunarity, and Hurst exponent

  • The repeatability of firstorder energy was acceptable, with the within-subject variability ranging from 10% to 15%

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of our study was to assess the dayto-day repeatability of global and localregional MR imaging texture features derived from primary rectal cancer

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
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