Frontiers in Oncology (Sep 2023)

Methodological quality of radiomic-based prognostic studies in gastric cancer: a cross-sectional study

  • Tianxiang Jiang,
  • Tianxiang Jiang,
  • Zhou Zhao,
  • Xueting Liu,
  • Chaoyong Shen,
  • Chaoyong Shen,
  • Mingchun Mu,
  • Mingchun Mu,
  • Zhaolun Cai,
  • Zhaolun Cai,
  • Bo Zhang,
  • Bo Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2023.1161237
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13

Abstract

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BackgroundMachine learning radiomics models are increasingly being used to predict gastric cancer prognoses. However, the methodological quality of these models has not been evaluated. Therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the methodological quality of radiomics studies in predicting the prognosis of gastric cancer, summarize their methodological characteristics and performance.MethodsThe PubMed and Embase databases were searched for radiomics studies used to predict the prognosis of gastric cancer published in last 5 years. The characteristics of the studies and the performance of the models were extracted from the eligible full texts. The methodological quality, reporting completeness and risk of bias of the included studies were evaluated using the RQS, TRIPOD and PROBAST. The discrimination ability scores of the models were also compared.ResultsOut of 283 identified records, 22 studies met the inclusion criteria. The study endpoints included survival time, treatment response, and recurrence, with reported discriminations ranging between 0.610 and 0.878 in the validation dataset. The mean overall RQS value was 15.32 ± 3.20 (range: 9 to 21). The mean adhered items of the 35 item of TRIPOD checklist was 20.45 ± 1.83. The PROBAST showed all included studies were at high risk of bias.ConclusionThe current methodological quality of gastric cancer radiomics studies is insufficient. Large and reasonable sample, prospective, multicenter and rigorously designed studies are required to improve the quality of radiomics models for gastric cancer prediction.Study registrationThis protocol was prospectively registered in the Open Science Framework Registry (https://osf.io/ja52b).

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