Repeatability of Multiparametric Prostate MRI Radiomics Features

July 16, 2018 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Scientific Reports

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Authors Michael Schwier, Joost van Griethuysen, Mark G Vangel, Steve Pieper, Sharon Peled, Clare M Tempany, Hugo JWL Aerts, Ron Kikinis, Fiona M Fennessy, Andrey Fedorov arXiv ID 1807.06089 Category cs.CV: Computer Vision Cross-listed eess.IV Citations 194 Venue Scientific Reports Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
In this study we assessed the repeatability of the values of radiomics features for small prostate tumors using test-retest Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging (mpMRI) images. The premise of radiomics is that quantitative image features can serve as biomarkers characterizing disease. For such biomarkers to be useful, repeatability is a basic requirement, meaning its value must remain stable between two scans, if the conditions remain stable. We investigated repeatability of radiomics features under various preprocessing and extraction configurations including various image normalization schemes, different image pre-filtering, 2D vs 3D texture computation, and different bin widths for image discretization. Image registration as means to re-identify regions of interest across time points was evaluated against human-expert segmented regions in both time points. Even though we found many radiomics features and preprocessing combinations with a high repeatability (Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC) > 0.85), our results indicate that overall the repeatability is highly sensitive to the processing parameters (under certain configurations, it can be below 0.0). Image normalization, using a variety of approaches considered, did not result in consistent improvements in repeatability. There was also no consistent improvement of repeatability through the use of pre-filtering options, or by using image registration between timepoints to improve consistency of the region of interest localization. Based on these results we urge caution when interpreting radiomics features and advise paying close attention to the processing configuration details of reported results. Furthermore, we advocate reporting all processing details in radiomics studies and strongly recommend making the implementation available.
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