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Characterisation of quantitative imaging biomarkers for inflammatory and fibrotic radiation-induced lung injuries using preclinical radiomics

Kathryn H. Brown, Mihaela Ghita, B. Kerr, Letitia Mohamed-Smith, Gerard Walls, Conor K. McGarry, Karl T. Butterworth

2024Radiotherapy and Oncology18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Radiomics is a rapidly evolving area of research that uses medical images to develop prognostic and predictive imaging biomarkers. In this study, we aimed to identify radiomics features correlated with longitudinal biomarkers in preclinical models of acute inflammatory and late fibrotic phenotypes following irradiation. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Female C3H/HeN and C57BL6 mice were irradiated with 20 Gy targeting the upper lobe of the right lung under cone-beam computed tomography (CBCT) image-guidance. Blood samples and lung tissue were collected at baseline, weeks 1, 10 & 30 to assess changes in serum cytokines and histological biomarkers. The right lung was segmented on longitudinal CBCT scans using ITK-SNAP. Unfiltered and filtered (wavelet) radiomics features (n = 842) were extracted using PyRadiomics. Longitudinal changes were assessed by delta analysis and principal component analysis (PCA) was used to remove redundancy and identify clustering. Prediction of acute (week 1) and late responses (weeks 20 & 30) was performed through deep learning using the Random Forest Classifier (RFC) model. RESULTS: Radiomics features were identified that correlated with inflammatory and fibrotic phenotypes. Predictive features for fibrosis were detected from PCA at 10 weeks yet overt tissue density was not detectable until 30 weeks. RFC prediction models trained on 5 features were created for inflammation (AUC 0.88), early-detection of fibrosis (AUC 0.79) and established fibrosis (AUC 0.96). CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates the application of deep learning radiomics to establish predictive models of acute and late lung injury. This approach supports the wider application of radiomics as a non-invasive tool for detection of radiation-induced lung complications.

Topics & Concepts

RadiomicsMedicineFibrosisLungRadiologyPathologyNuclear medicineInternal medicineRadiomics and Machine Learning in Medical ImagingEffects of Radiation ExposureLung Cancer Diagnosis and Treatment
Characterisation of quantitative imaging biomarkers for inflammatory and fibrotic radiation-induced lung injuries using preclinical radiomics | Litcius