QMLGIVJun 17, 2020

Spatial-And-Context aware (SpACe) "virtual biopsy" radiogenomic maps to target tumor mutational status on structural MRI

arXiv:2006.09878v13 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of reliable gene mutation assessment in cancer imaging for personalized therapy, offering a method to guide surgical biopsies, though it is incremental by integrating existing techniques.

The paper tackles the problem of predicting tumor mutational status from MRI scans by developing SpACe maps that combine spatial and context features, achieving training and testing accuracies of up to 90% for EGFR and 88.3% for MGMT in glioblastoma, outperforming deep-learning and radiomic models.

With growing emphasis on personalized cancer-therapies,radiogenomics has shown promise in identifying target tumor mutational status on routine imaging (i.e. MRI) scans. These approaches fall into 2 categories: (1) deep-learning/radiomics (context-based), using image features from the entire tumor to identify the gene mutation status, or (2) atlas (spatial)-based to obtain likelihood of gene mutation status based on population statistics. While many genes (i.e. EGFR, MGMT) are spatially variant, a significant challenge in reliable assessment of gene mutation status on imaging has been the lack of available co-localized ground truth for training the models. We present Spatial-And-Context aware (SpACe) "virtual biopsy" maps that incorporate context-features from co-localized biopsy site along with spatial-priors from population atlases, within a Least Absolute Shrinkage and Selection Operator (LASSO) regression model, to obtain a per-voxel probability of the presence of a mutation status (M+ vs M-). We then use probabilistic pair-wise Markov model to improve the voxel-wise prediction probability. We evaluate the efficacy of SpACe maps on MRI scans with co-localized ground truth obtained from corresponding biopsy, to predict the mutation status of 2 driver genes in Glioblastoma: (1) EGFR (n=91), and (2) MGMT (n=81). When compared against deep-learning (DL) and radiomic models, SpACe maps obtained training and testing accuracies of 90% (n=71) and 90.48% (n=21) in identifying EGFR amplification status,compared to 80% and 71.4% via radiomics, and 74.28% and 65.5% via DL. For MGMT status, training and testing accuracies using SpACe were 88.3% (n=61) and 71.5% (n=20), compared to 52.4% and 66.7% using radiomics,and 79.3% and 68.4% using DL. Following validation,SpACe maps could provide surgical navigation to improve localization of sampling sites for targeting of specific driver genes in cancer.

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