Multiregional radiomics features from multiparametric MRI for prediction of MGMT methylation status in glioblastoma multiforme: A multicentre study

Adult Aged, 80 and over Male Adolescent Brain Neoplasms DNA, Neoplasm DNA Methylation Middle Aged Magnetic Resonance Imaging 3. Good health 03 medical and health sciences DNA Repair Enzymes 0302 clinical medicine ROC Curve Biomarkers, Tumor Humans Female Child Glioblastoma Promoter Regions, Genetic DNA Modification Methylases Aged Retrospective Studies
DOI: 10.1007/s00330-017-5302-1 Publication Date: 2018-03-21T06:47:35Z
ABSTRACT
To build a reliable radiomics model from multiregional and multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) for pretreatment prediction of O6-methylguanine-DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) promotor methylation status in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM).In this retrospective multicentre study, 1,705 multiregional radiomics features were automatically extracted from multiparametric MRI. A radiomics model with a minimal set of all-relevant features and a radiomics model with univariately-predictive and non-redundant features were built for MGMT methylation prediction from a primary cohort (133 patients) and tested on an independent validation cohort (60 patients). Predictive models combing clinical factors were built and evaluated. Both radiomics models were assessed on subgroups stratified by clinical factors.The radiomics model with six all-relevant features allowed pretreatment prediction of MGMT methylation (AUC=0.88, accuracy=80 %), which significantly outperformed the model with eight univariately-predictive and non-redundant features (AUC=0.76, accuracy=70 %). Combing clinical factors with radiomics features did not benefit the prediction performance. The all-relevant model achieved significantly better performance in stratified analysis.Radiomics model built from multiregional and multiparameter MRI may serve as a potential imaging biomarker for pretreatment prediction of MGMT methylation in GBM. The all-relevant features have the potential of offering better predictive power than the univariately-predictive and non-redundant features.• Multiregional and multiparametric MRI features reliably predicted MGMT methylation in multicentre cohorts. • All-relevant imaging features predicted MGMT methylation better than univariately-predictive and non-redundant features. • Combing clinical factors with radiomics features did not benefit the prediction performance.
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