Abstract

Background: Response to induction chemotherapy (IC) has been predicted in patients with sinonasal cancer using early delta radiomics obtained from T1- and T2-weighted images and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps, comparing results with early radiological evaluation by RECIST. Methods: Fifty patients were included in the study. For each image (at baseline and after the first IC cycle), 536 radiomic features were extracted as follows: semi-supervised principal component analysis components, explaining 97% of the variance, were used together with a support vector machine (SVM) to develop a radiomic signature. One signature was developed for each sequence (T1-, T2-weighted and ADC). A multiagent decision-making algorithm was used to merge multiple signatures into one score. Results: The area under the curve (AUC) for mono-modality signatures was 0.79 (CI: 0.65–0.88), 0.76 (CI: 0.62–0.87) and 0.93 (CI: 0.75–1) using T1-, T2-weighted and ADC images, respectively. The fuse signature improved the AUC when an ADC-based signature was added. Radiological prediction using RECIST criteria reached an accuracy of 0.78. Conclusions: These results suggest the importance of early delta radiomics and of ADC maps to predict the response to IC in sinonasal cancers.

Highlights

  • Sinonasal cancers (SNCs) represent a group of rare and heterogenous tumors arising in the nasal cavity and sinuses

  • To understand the importance of the different features on the principal components selected for delta-radiomics-based classification, Figure 1 shows the feature relative weights highlighting the class of belonging (SS, texture, FOS and wavelets)

  • The number of features for the different modalities (x-axis) is different because the semi-supervised principal component analysis (PCA) reduces the total number of features, preselecting only those correlated to the output

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Summary

Introduction

Sinonasal cancers (SNCs) represent a group of rare and heterogenous tumors arising in the nasal cavity and sinuses. Their incidence is less than 1 case per 100,000 individuals; SNCs account for less than 15% of head and neck cancers [1]. Response to induction chemotherapy (IC) has been predicted in patients with sinonasal cancer using early delta radiomics obtained from T1- and T2-weighted images and apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps, comparing results with early radiological evaluation by RECIST. Conclusions: These results suggest the importance of early delta radiomics and of ADC maps to predict the response to IC in sinonasal cancers

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