Frontiers in Immunology (Oct 2022)

Non-invasive measurement of tumor immune microenvironment and prediction of survival and chemotherapeutic benefits from 18F fluorodeoxyglucose PET/CT images in gastric cancer

  • Junmeng Li,
  • Chao Zhang,
  • Huihui Guo,
  • Shuang Li,
  • Yang You,
  • Peiming Zheng,
  • Hongquan Zhang,
  • Huanan Wang,
  • Junwei Bai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2022.1019386
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundThe tumor immune microenvironment could provide prognostic and predictive information. It is necessary to develop a noninvasive radiomics-based biomarker of a previously validated tumor immune microenvironment signature of gastric cancer (GC) with immunohistochemistry staining.MethodsA total of 230 patients (training (n = 153) or validation (n = 77) cohort) with gastric cancer were subjected to (Positron Emission Tomography-Computed Tomography) radiomics feature extraction (80 features). A radiomics tumor immune microenvironment score (RTIMS) was developed to predict the tumor immune microenvironment signature with LASSO logistic regression. Furthermore, we evaluated its relation with prognosis and chemotherapy benefits.ResultsA 8-feature radiomics signature was established and validated (area under the curve=0.692 and 0.713). The RTIMS signature was significantly associated with disease-free survival and overall survival both in the training and validation cohort (all P<0.001). RTIMS was an independent prognostic factor in the Multivariate analysis. Further analysis revealed that high RTIMS patients benefitted from adjuvant chemotherapy (for DFS, stage II: HR 0.208(95% CI 0.061-0.711), p=0.012; stage III: HR 0.321(0.180-0.570), p<0.001, respectively); while there were no benefits from chemotherapy in a low RTIMS patients.ConclusionThis PET/CT radiomics model provided a promising way to assess the tumor immune microenvironment and to predict clinical outcomes and chemotherapy response. The RTIMS signature could be useful in estimating tumor immune microenvironment and predicting survival and chemotherapy benefit for patients with gastric cancer, when validated by further prospective randomized trials.

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