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MO‐DE‐207B‐01: JACK FOWLER JUNIOR INVESTIGATOR COMPETITION WINNER: Between Somatic Mutations and PET‐Based Radiomic Features in Non‐Small Cell Lung Cancer
Author(s) -
Yip S,
Kim J,
Coroller T,
Rios Velazquez E,
Parmar C,
Mak R,
Aerts H
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
medical physics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.473
H-Index - 180
eISSN - 2473-4209
pISSN - 0094-2405
DOI - 10.1118/1.4957250
Subject(s) - lung cancer , somatic cell , competition (biology) , medicine , nuclear medicine , medical physics , pathology , biology , genetics , ecology , gene
Purpose: Although PET‐based radiomic features have been proposed to quantify tumor heterogeneity and shown promise in outcome prediction, little is known about their relationship with tumor genetics. This study assessed the association of [ 18 F]fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)‐PET‐based radiomic features with non‐small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) mutations. Methods: 348 NSCLC patients underwent FDG‐PET/CT scans before treatment and were tested for genetic mutations. 13% (44/348) and 28% (96/348) patients were found to harbor EGFR (EGFR+) and KRAS (KRAS+) mutations, respectively. We evaluated nineteen PET‐based radiomic features quantifying phenotypic traits, and compared them with conventional PET features (metabolic tumor volume (MTV) and maximum‐SUV). The association between the feature values and mutation status was evaluated using the Wilcoxcon‐rank‐sum‐test. The ability of each measure to predict mutations was assessed by the area under the receiver operating curve (AUC). Noether's test was used to determine if the AUCs were significantly from random (AUC=0.50). All p‐values were corrected for multiple testing by controlling the false discovery rate (FDR Wilcoxon and FDR Noether ) of 10%. Results: Eight radiomic features, MTV, and maximum‐SUV, were significantly associated with the EGFR mutation (FDR Wilcoxon =0.01–0.10). However, KRAS+ demonstrated no significantly distinctive imaging features compared to KRAS− (FDR Wilcoxon ≥0.92). EGFR+ and EGFR− were significantly discriminated by conventional PET features (AUC=0.61, FDR Noether =0.04 for MTV and AUC=0.64, FDR Noether =0.01 for maximum‐SUV). Eight radiomic features were significantly predictive for EGFR+ compared to EGFR− (AUC=0.59–0.67, FDR Noether =0.0032–0.09). Normalized‐inverse‐difference‐moment outperformed all features in predicting EGFR mutation (AUC=0.67, FDR Noether =0.0032). Moreover, only the radiomic feature normalized‐inverse‐difference‐moment could significantly predict KRAS+ from EGFR+ (AUC=0.65, FDR Noether =0.05). All measures failed to predict KRAS+ from KRAS− (AUC=0.50–0.54, FDR Noether ≥0.92). Conclusion: PET imaging features were strongly associated with EGFR mutations in NSCLC. Radiomic features have great potential in predicting EGFR mutations. Our study may help develop a non‐invasive imaging biomarker for EGFR mutation. R.M. has consulting interests with Amgen