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Assessment of response to tyrosine kinase inhibitors in metastatic renal cell cancer: Computed tomography (CT) texture analysis as a potential biomarker

journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-07, 16:04 authored by Vicky Goh, Balaji Ganeshan, Paul Nathan, Jaspal K. Juttla, Anup Vinayan, Kenneth A. Miles
Purpose: To assess changes in tumor computed tomographic (CT) texture after two cycles of treatment with tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) and to determine if tumor texture correlates with measured time to progression in patients with metastatic renal cell cancer who received TKIs. Materials and Methods: A waiver of institutional review board approval was obtained for this retrospective analysis. Contrast material-enhanced CT texture parameters were assessed in 39 patients with metastatic renal cell cancer who received a TKI. A total of 87 metastases were analyzed at baseline and after two treatment cycles. Changes in tumor entropy and uniformity were derived with a software algorithm that selectively filters and extracts texture at different scales (fine to coarse detail: 1.0-2.5) and were recorded. Response assessment was also obtained by using response evaluation criteria in solid tumors (RECIST), as well as Choi and modified Choi criteria. The correlation of texture parameters and standard criteria with measured time to progression was assessed by using Kaplan-Meier analysis and a Cox regression model. Statistical significance was set at 5%. Results: Tumor entropy decreased by 3%-45% and uniformity increased by 5%-21% for the different scale values after administration of a TKI. With a threshold change of -2% or less for uniformity at a coarse scale value of 2.5, Kaplan-Meier curves of the proportion of patients without disease progression were significantly different and better than those for standard response assessment (P = .008 vs P = .267, P = .053, and P = .042 for RECIST, Choi, and modified Choi criteria, respectively). Cox regression analysis showed that texture uniformity was an independent predictor of time to progression (odds ratio, 4.02; 95% confidence interval: 1.52, 10.65; P = .005). Conclusion: CT texture analysis reflecting tumor heterogeneity is an independent factor associated with time to progression and has potential as a predictive imaging biomarker of response of metastatic renal cancer to targeted therapy.

History

Publication status

  • Published

Journal

Radiology

ISSN

0033-8419

Publisher

Radiological Society of North America

Issue

1

Volume

261

Page range

165-171

Department affiliated with

  • Mathematics Publications

Full text available

  • No

Peer reviewed?

  • Yes

Legacy Posted Date

2012-04-03

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