Sense and nonsense of yT-staging on MRI after chemoradiotherapy in rectal cancer

Najim El Khababi, Regina G. H. Beets-Tan, Renaud J. Tissier, Max Lahaye, Monique Maas, Luis Curvo-Semedo, Raphaela C. Dresen, Stephanie L. Nougaret, Geerard Beets, Doenja M. J. Lambregts*, rectal MRI study group

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Aim: The aim of this work was to investigate the value of rectal cancer T-staging on MRI after chemoradiotherapy (ymrT-staging) in relation to the degree of fibrotic transformation of the tumour bed as assessed using the pathological tumour regression grade (pTRG) of Mandard as a standard of reference.Method: Twenty two radiologists, including five rectal MRI experts and 17 'nonexperts' (general/abdominal radiologists), evaluated the ymrT stage on the restaging MRIs of 90 rectal cancer patients after chemoradiotherapy. The ymrT stage was compared with the final ypT stage at histopathology; the percentages of correct staging (ymrT = ypT), understaging (ymrT < ypT) and overstaging (ymrT > ypT) were calculated and compared between patients with predominant tumour at histopathology (pTRG4-5) and patients with predominant fibrosis (pTRG1-3). Interobserver agreement (IOA) was computed using Krippendorff's alpha.Results: Average ymrT/ypT stage concordance was 48% for the experts and 43% for the nonexperts; ymrT/ypT stage concordance was significantly higher in the pTRG4-5 subgroup (58% vs. 41% for the pTRG1-3 group; p = 0.01), with the best results for the MRI experts. Overstaging was the main source of error, especially in the pTRG1-3 subgroup (average overstaging rate 38%-44% vs. 13%-55% in the pTRG4-5 subgroup). IOA was higher for the expert versus nonexpert readers (a = 0.67 vs. a = 0.39).Conclusions: ymrT-staging is moderately accurate; accuracy is higher in poorly responding patients with predominant tumour but low in good responders with predominant fibrosis, resulting in significant overstaging. Radiologists should shift their focus from ymrT-staging to detecting gross residual (and progressive) disease, and identifying potential candidates for organ preservation who would benefit from further clinical and endoscopic evaluation to guide final treatment planning.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1878-1887
Number of pages10
JournalColorectal Disease
Volume25
Issue number9
Early online date1 Aug 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2023

Keywords

  • magnetic resonance imaging
  • neoplasm staging
  • rectal neoplasms
  • TUMOR-REGRESSION GRADE
  • PREOPERATIVE CHEMORADIOTHERAPY
  • CHEMORADIATION
  • ULTRASOUND
  • ACCURACY
  • OUTCOMES

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