The novel International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer (IASLC) grading system of invasive lung adenocarcinoma (ADC) demonstrated a remarkable prognostic effect and enabled numerous patients to benefit from adjuvant chemotherapy. We sought to build a CT-based nomogram for preoperative prediction of the IASLC grading. This work retrospectively analyzed the CT images and clinical data of 303 patients with pathologically confirmed invasive ADC. The histological subtypes and radiological characteristics of the patients were re-evaluated. Radiomics features were extracted, and the optimal subset of features was established by ANOVA, spearman correlation analysis, and the least absolute shrinkage and selection operator (LASSO). Univariate and multivariate analyses identified the independent clinical and radiological variables. Finally, multivariate logistic regression analysis incorporated clinical, radiological, and optimal radiomics features into the nomogram. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve, and accuracy were applied to assess the model's performance. Decision curve analysis (DCA), and calibration curve were applied to assess the clinical usefulness. Nine selected CT image features were used to develop the radiomics model. The accuracy, precision, sensitivity, and specificity of the radiomics model outperformed the clinic-radiological model in the training and testing sets. Integrating Radscore with independent radiological characteristics showed higher prediction performance than clinic-radiological characteristics alone in the training (AUC, 0.915 vs. 0.882; DeLong, p < 0.05) and testing (AUC, 0.838 vs. 0.782; DeLong, p < 0.05) sets. Good calibration and decision curve analysis demonstrated the clinical usefulness of the nomogram. Radiomics features effectively predict high-grade ADC. The combined nomogram may facilitate selecting patients who benefit from adjuvant treatment.
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