Frontiers in Oncology (Apr 2024)

Quantitative ultrasound radiomics guided adaptive neoadjuvant chemotherapy in breast cancer: early results from a randomized feasibility study

  • Archya Dasgupta,
  • Archya Dasgupta,
  • Archya Dasgupta,
  • Daniel DiCenzo,
  • Lakshmanan Sannachi,
  • Sonal Gandhi,
  • Sonal Gandhi,
  • Rossana C. Pezo,
  • Rossana C. Pezo,
  • Andrea Eisen,
  • Andrea Eisen,
  • Ellen Warner,
  • Ellen Warner,
  • Frances C. Wright,
  • Frances C. Wright,
  • Nicole Look-Hong,
  • Nicole Look-Hong,
  • Ali Sadeghi-Naini,
  • Ali Sadeghi-Naini,
  • Ali Sadeghi-Naini,
  • Ali Sadeghi-Naini,
  • Belinda Curpen,
  • Belinda Curpen,
  • Michael C. Kolios,
  • Maureen Trudeau,
  • Maureen Trudeau,
  • Gregory J. Czarnota,
  • Gregory J. Czarnota,
  • Gregory J. Czarnota,
  • Gregory J. Czarnota

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2024.1273437
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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BackgroundIn patients with locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NAC), quantitative ultrasound (QUS) radiomics can predict final responses early within 4 of 16-18 weeks of treatment. The current study was planned to study the feasibility of a QUS-radiomics model-guided adaptive chemotherapy.MethodsThe phase 2 open-label randomized controlled trial included patients with LABC planned for NAC. Patients were randomly allocated in 1:1 ratio to a standard arm or experimental arm stratified by hormonal receptor status. All patients were planned for standard anthracycline and taxane-based NAC as decided by their medical oncologist. Patients underwent QUS imaging using a clinical ultrasound device before the initiation of NAC and after the 1st and 4th weeks of treatment. A support vector machine-based radiomics model developed from an earlier cohort of patients was used to predict treatment response at the 4th week of NAC. In the standard arm, patients continued to receive planned chemotherapy with the treating oncologists blinded to results. In the experimental arm, the QUS-based prediction was conveyed to the responsible oncologist, and any changes to the planned chemotherapy for predicted non-responders were made by the responsible oncologist. All patients underwent surgery following NAC, and the final response was evaluated based on histopathological examination.ResultsBetween June 2018 and July 2021, 60 patients were accrued in the study arm, with 28 patients in each arm available for final analysis. In patients without a change in chemotherapy regimen (53 of 56 patients total), the QUS-radiomics model at week 4 of NAC that was used demonstrated an accuracy of 97%, respectively, in predicting the final treatment response. Seven patients were predicted to be non-responders (observational arm (n=2), experimental arm (n=5)). Three of 5 non-responders in the experimental arm had chemotherapy regimens adapted with an early initiation of taxane therapy or chemotherapy intensification, or early surgery and ended up as responders on final evaluation.ConclusionThe study demonstrates the feasibility of QUS-radiomics adapted guided NAC for patients with breast cancer. The ability of a QUS-based model in the early prediction of treatment response was prospectively validated in the current study.Clinical trial registrationclinicaltrials.gov, ID NCT04050228.

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