Abstract

(1) Background: The relatively poor expert restaging accuracy of MRI in rectal cancer after neoadjuvant chemoradiation may be due to the difficulties in visual assessment of residual tumor on post-treatment MRI. In order to capture underlying tissue alterations and morphologic changes in rectal structures occurring due to the treatment, we hypothesized that radiomics texture and shape descriptors of the rectal environment (e.g., wall, lumen) on post-chemoradiation T2-weighted (T2w) MRI may be associated with tumor regression after neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy (nCRT). (2) Methods: A total of 94 rectal cancer patients were retrospectively identified from three collaborating institutions, for whom a 1.5 or 3T T2w MRI was available after nCRT and prior to surgical resection. The rectal wall and the lumen were annotated by an expert radiologist on all MRIs, based on which 191 texture descriptors and 198 shape descriptors were extracted for each patient. (3) Results: Top-ranked features associated with pathologic tumor-stage regression were identified via cross-validation on a discovery set (n = 52, 1 institution) and evaluated via discriminant analysis in hold-out validation (n = 42, 2 institutions). The best performing features for distinguishing low (ypT0-2) and high (ypT3–4) pathologic tumor stages after nCRT comprised directional gradient texture expression and morphologic shape differences in the entire rectal wall and lumen. Not only were these radiomic features found to be resilient to variations in magnetic field strength and expert segmentations, a quadratic discriminant model combining them yielded consistent performance across multiple institutions (hold-out AUC of 0.73). (4) Conclusions: Radiomic texture and shape descriptors of the rectal wall from post-treatment T2w MRIs may be associated with low and high pathologic tumor stage after neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy and generalized across variations between scanners and institutions.

Highlights

  • Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer worldwide, of which over 700,000 patients will be annually diagnosed with tumors localized to the rectum [1]

  • We investigated the ability of radiomic features from post-treatment T2w Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to evaluate pathologic tumor down-staging after neoadjuvant chemoradiation therapy (nCRT) in rectal cancers

  • Restaging rectal cancer after neoadjuvant therapy is currently one of the most significant clinical challenges, since it provides the possibility of changing the planned surgical treatment based on accurately determining tumor regression after nCRT

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Summary

Introduction

Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer worldwide (incidence rate of 10.2%), of which over 700,000 patients will be annually diagnosed with tumors localized to the rectum [1]. Expert restaging of tumor extent on post-nCRT T2w MRI has relatively poor agreement with “ground truth” pathologic stage (MRI sensitivity of ~52% when compared to excised specimens) due to the difficulties in visual identification of residual tumor on imaging [12,13]. This confounded appearance is primarily due to the appearance of fibrotic regions within the rectal wall after neoadjuvant therapy, which have an overlapping intensity appearance with residual tumor on

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