Frontiers in Oncology (Feb 2022)

MRI-Based Radiomics Nomogram: Prediction of Axillary Non-Sentinel Lymph Node Metastasis in Patients With Sentinel Lymph Node-Positive Breast Cancer

  • Ya Qiu,
  • Ya Qiu,
  • Ya Qiu,
  • Xiang Zhang,
  • Xiang Zhang,
  • Zhiyuan Wu,
  • Shiji Wu,
  • Shiji Wu,
  • Shiji Wu,
  • Zehong Yang,
  • Zehong Yang,
  • Dongye Wang,
  • Dongye Wang,
  • Hongbo Le,
  • Hongbo Le,
  • Jiaji Mao,
  • Jiaji Mao,
  • Guochao Dai,
  • Xuwei Tian,
  • Renbing Zhou,
  • Jiayi Huang,
  • Jiayi Huang,
  • Lanxin Hu,
  • Lanxin Hu,
  • Jun Shen,
  • Jun Shen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2022.811347
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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BackgroundOvertreatment of axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) may occur in patients with axillary positive sentinel lymph node (SLN) but negative non-SLN (NSLN). Developing a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based radiomics nomogram to predict axillary NSLN metastasis in patients with SLN-positive breast cancer could effectively decrease the probability of overtreatment and optimize a personalized axillary surgical strategy.MethodsThis retrospective study included 285 patients with positive SLN breast cancer. Fifty five of them had metastatic NSLNs and 230 had non-metastatic NSLNs. MRI-based radiomic features of primary tumors were extracted and MRI morphologic findings of the primary tumor and axillary lymph nodes were assessed. Four models, namely, a radiomics signature, an MRI-clinical nomogram, and two MRI-clinical-radiomics nomograms were established based on MRI morphologic findings, clinicopathologic characteristics, and MRI-based radiomic features to predict the NSLN status. The optimal predictors in each model were selected using the 5-fold cross-validation (CV) method. Their predictive performances were determined by the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves analysis. The area under the curves (AUCs) of different models was compared by the Delong test. Their discrimination capability, calibration curve, and clinical usefulness were also assessed.ResultsThe 5-fold CV analysis showed that the AUCs ranged from 0.770 to 0.847 for the radiomics signature, from 0.720 to 0.824 for the MRI-clinical nomogram, from 0.843 to 0.932 for the MRI-clinical-radiomics nomogram. The optimal predictive factors in the radiomics signature, MRI-clinical nomogram, and MRI-clinical-radiomics nomogram were one texture feature of diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), two clinicopathologic features together with one MRI morphologic finding, and the DWI-based texture feature together with the two clinicopathologic features plus the one MRI morphologic finding, respectively. The MRI-clinical-radiomics nomogram with CA 15-3 included achieved the highest AUC compared with the radiomics signature (0.868 vs. 0.806, P <0.001) and MRI-clinical nomogram (0.868 vs. 0.761; P <0.001). In addition, the MRI-clinical-radiomics nomogram without CA 15-3 showed a higher performance than that of the radiomics signature (AUC, 0.852 vs. 0.806, P = 0.016) and the MRI-clinical nomogram (AUC, 0.852 vs. 0.761, P = 0.007). The MRI-clinical-radiomics nomograms showed good discrimination and good calibration. Decision curve analysis demonstrated that the MRI-clinical-radiomics nomograms were clinically useful.ConclusionThe MRI-clinical-radiomics nomograms developed in our study showed high predictive performance, which can be used to predict the axillary NSLN status in SLN-positive breast cancer patients before surgery.

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