External validation of F-18-FDG PET-based radiomic models on identification of residual oesophageal cancer after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy

Maria J. Valkema*, Roelof J. Beukinga, Avishek Chatterjee, Henry C. Woodruff, David van Klaveren, Walter Noordzij, Roelf Valkema, Roel J. Bennink, Mark J. Roef, Wendy Schreurs, Michail Doukas, Sjoerd M. Lagarde, Bas P. L. Wijnhoven, Philippe Lambin, John T. M. Plukker, J. Jan B. van Lanschot

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

ObjectivesDetection of residual oesophageal cancer after neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (nCRT) is important to guide treatment decisions regarding standard oesophagectomy or active surveillance. The aim was to validate previously developed F-18-FDG PET-based radiomic models to detect residual local tumour and to repeat model development (i.e. 'model extension') in case of poor generalisability. MethodsThis was a retrospective cohort study in patients collected from a prospective multicentre study in four Dutch institutes. Patients underwent nCRT followed by oesophagectomy between 2013 and 2019. Outcome was tumour regression grade (TRG) 1 (0% tumour) versus TRG 2-3-4 (& GE;1% tumour). Scans were acquired according to standardised protocols. Discrimination and calibration were assessed for the published models with optimism-corrected AUCs >0.77. For model extension, the development and external validation cohorts were combined. ResultsBaseline characteristics of the 189 patients included [median age 66 years (interquartile range 60-71), 158/189 male (84%), 40/189 TRG 1 (21%) and 149/189 (79%) TRG 2-3-4] were comparable to the development cohort. The model including cT stage plus the feature 'sum entropy' had best discriminative performance in external validation (AUC 0.64, 95% confidence interval 0.55-0.73), with a calibration slope and intercept of 0.16 and 0.48 respectively. An extended bootstrapped LASSO model yielded an AUC of 0.65 for TRG 2-3-4 detection. ConclusionThe high predictive performance of the published radiomic models could not be replicated. The extended model had moderate discriminative ability. The investigated radiomic models appeared inaccurate to detect local residual oesophageal tumour and cannot be used as an adjunct tool for clinical decision-making in patients.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)709-718
Number of pages10
JournalNuclear Medicine Communications
Volume44
Issue number8
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Aug 2023

Keywords

  • F-18-FDG PET
  • CT
  • active surveillance
  • neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy
  • oesophageal cancer
  • radiomics
  • PREOPERATIVE CHEMORADIOTHERAPY
  • COMPLETE RESPONSE
  • PREDICTION
  • REGRESSION
  • SURGERY

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