Predicting clinically significant prostate cancer using DCE-MRI habitat descriptors.

Abstact

Prostate cancer diagnosis and treatment continues to be a major public health challenge. The heterogeneity of the disease is one of the major factors leading to imprecise diagnosis and suboptimal disease management. The improved resolution of functional multi-parametric magnetic resonance imaging (mpMRI) has shown promise to improve detection and characterization of the disease. Regions that subdivide the tumor based on Dynamic Contrast Enhancement (DCE) of mpMRI are referred to as <i>DCE-Habitats</i> in this study. The DCE defined perfusion curve patterns on the identified tumor habitat region are used to assess clinical significance. These perfusion curves were systematically quantified using seven features in association with the patient biopsy outcome and classifier models were built to find the best discriminating characteristics between clinically significant and insignificant prostate lesions defined by Gleason score (GS). Multivariable analysis was performed independently on one institution and validated on the other, using a multi-parametric feature model, based on DCE characteristics and ADC features. The models had an intra institution Area under the Receiver Operating Characteristic (AUC) of 0.82. Trained on Institution I and validated on the cohort from Institution II, the AUC was also 0.82 (sensitivity 0.68, specificity 0.95).

Authors
  • Abdalah M
  • Balagurunathan Y
  • Choi J
  • Gage K
  • Gillies RJ
  • Kosj Y
  • Li Q
  • Lopez C
  • Lu H
  • Park JY
  • Parra NA
  • Pollack A
  • Pow-Sang JM
  • Punnen S
  • Stoyanova R
PubMed ID
Appears In
Oncotarget, 2018, 9 (98)