TY - JOUR
T1 - Selection of rectal cancer patients for organ preservation after neoadjuvant therapy
T2 - value of T2W-MRI signal intensity
AU - van der Reijd, Denise J.
AU - Ou, Xinde
AU - Dijkhoff, Rebecca A.P.
AU - Drago, Silvia G.
AU - Tissier, Renaud
AU - van Griethuysen, Joost J.M.
AU - Lambregts, Doenja M.J.
AU - Bakers, Frans C.H.
AU - Houwers, Janneke B.
AU - Beets-Tan, Regina G.H.
AU - Maas, Monique
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Foundation Acta Radiologica 2025.
PY - 2025/2/6
Y1 - 2025/2/6
N2 - Background: Organ preservation strategies have been widely implemented for rectal cancer (RC) patients with a good response after neoadjuvant chemoradiation (nCRT). However, to accurately select eligible patients remains one of the key diagnostic challenges. Purpose: To identify eligible candidates for organ preservation after nCRT in RC, by identifying luminal response and lymph node metastases, based on T2W-MRI signal intensities. Material and Methods: A total of 171 RC patients underwent MRI before and after nCRT. The primary tumor (pre-nCRT-MRI) and tumor remnant (post-nCRT-MRI) were manually delineated. Ten signal intensity features were extracted and delta features were calculated by subtraction. Histopathological evaluation classified patients as lymph node negative (ypN0) or positive (ypN+), and as good responders (GR) or partial/poor responders (PR). Five models were constructed based on the timing of imaging. Results: 42/170 (25%) patients had ypN+, and 72/152 (47%) patients were considered GR. Univariate analysis showed 13/40 signal intensity features were significantly different between luminal response groups and 4/40 between nodal response groups. In multivariate analysis, the Baseline + Restaging-model yielded the best results for both luminal and nodal response with AUCs in the test set of 0.81 (95% CI=0.67–0.95) and 0.74 (95% CI=0.59–0.90), respectively. To identify PR, the Delta-model yielded an AUC of 0.72 (95% CI=0.56–0.89) and the Delta + Restaging-model an AUC of 0.81 (95% CI=0.67–0.95), both were not able to differentiate nodal response. The models including solely baseline or restaging features were not predictive. Conclusion: T2W-MRI signal intensities of the primary rectal tumor are related to the luminal and nodal response after nCRT and hold promise to identify patients eligible for organ preservation.
AB - Background: Organ preservation strategies have been widely implemented for rectal cancer (RC) patients with a good response after neoadjuvant chemoradiation (nCRT). However, to accurately select eligible patients remains one of the key diagnostic challenges. Purpose: To identify eligible candidates for organ preservation after nCRT in RC, by identifying luminal response and lymph node metastases, based on T2W-MRI signal intensities. Material and Methods: A total of 171 RC patients underwent MRI before and after nCRT. The primary tumor (pre-nCRT-MRI) and tumor remnant (post-nCRT-MRI) were manually delineated. Ten signal intensity features were extracted and delta features were calculated by subtraction. Histopathological evaluation classified patients as lymph node negative (ypN0) or positive (ypN+), and as good responders (GR) or partial/poor responders (PR). Five models were constructed based on the timing of imaging. Results: 42/170 (25%) patients had ypN+, and 72/152 (47%) patients were considered GR. Univariate analysis showed 13/40 signal intensity features were significantly different between luminal response groups and 4/40 between nodal response groups. In multivariate analysis, the Baseline + Restaging-model yielded the best results for both luminal and nodal response with AUCs in the test set of 0.81 (95% CI=0.67–0.95) and 0.74 (95% CI=0.59–0.90), respectively. To identify PR, the Delta-model yielded an AUC of 0.72 (95% CI=0.56–0.89) and the Delta + Restaging-model an AUC of 0.81 (95% CI=0.67–0.95), both were not able to differentiate nodal response. The models including solely baseline or restaging features were not predictive. Conclusion: T2W-MRI signal intensities of the primary rectal tumor are related to the luminal and nodal response after nCRT and hold promise to identify patients eligible for organ preservation.
KW - chemoradiotherapy
KW - magnetic resonance imaging
KW - organ preservation
KW - Rectal neoplasm
KW - response
U2 - 10.1177/02841851241309008
DO - 10.1177/02841851241309008
M3 - Journal article
AN - SCOPUS:85217031268
SN - 0284-1851
JO - Acta Radiologica
JF - Acta Radiologica
ER -