Assessing the generalisability of radiomics features previously identified as predictive of radiation-induced sticky saliva and xerostomia
Authors
Berger, T.Noble, D. J.
Yang, Z.
Shelley, L. E. A.
McMullan, T.
Bates, A.
Thomas, S.
Carruthers, L. J.
Beckett, G.
Duffton, A.
Paterson, C.
Jena, R.
McLaren, D. B.
Burnet, Neil G
Nailon, W. H.
Affiliation
Department of Oncology Physics, Edinburgh Cancer Centre, Western General Hospital, Crewe Road South, Edinburgh EH4 2XU, UKIssue Date
2023
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Background and purpose: While core to the scientific approach, reproducibility of experimental results is challenging in radiomics studies. A recent publication identified radiomics features that are predictive of late irradiation-induced toxicity in head and neck cancer (HNC) patients. In this study, we assessed the generalisability of these findings. Materials and methods: The procedure described in the publication in question was applied to a cohort of 109 HNC patients treated with 50-70 Gy in 20-35 fractions using helical radiotherapy although there were inherent differences between the two patient populations and methodologies. On each slice of the planning CT with delineated parotid and submandibular glands, the imaging features that were previously identified as predictive of moderate-to-severe xerostomia and sticky saliva 12 months post radiotherapy (Xer12m and SS12m) were calculated. Specifically, Short Run Emphasis (SRE) and maximum CT intensity (maxHU) were evaluated for improvement in prediction of Xer12m and SS12m respectively, compared to models solely using baseline toxicity and mean dose to the salivary glands. Results: None of the associations previously identified as statistically significant and involving radiomics features in univariate or multivariate models could be reproduced on our cohort. Conclusion: The discrepancies observed between the results of the two studies delineate limits to the generalisability of the previously reported findings. This may be explained by the differences in the approaches, in particular the imaging characteristics and subsequent methodological implementation. This highlights the importance of external validation, high quality reporting guidelines and standardisation protocols to ensure generalisability, replication and ultimately clinical implementation.Citation
Berger T, Noble DJ, Yang Z, Shelley LEA, McMullan T, Bates A, et al. Assessing the generalisability of radiomics features previously identified as predictive of radiation-induced sticky saliva and xerostomia. Physics and imaging in radiation oncology. 2023 Jan;25:100404. PubMed PMID: 36660107. Pubmed Central PMCID: PMC9843480. Epub 2023/01/21. eng.Journal
Physics and Imaging in Radiation OncologyDOI
10.1016/j.phro.2022.12.001PubMed ID
36660107Additional Links
https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.phro.2022.12.001Type
ArticleLanguage
enae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1016/j.phro.2022.12.001
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