Multi-parametric MR Imaging Biomarkers Associated to Clinical Outcomes in Gliomas: A Systematic Review

Author:

Oltra-Sastre Miquel1,Fuster-Garcia Elies1,Juan-Albarracin Javier1,Sáez Carlos1,Perez-Girbes Alexandre2,Sanz-Requena Roberto3,Revert-Ventura Antonio4,Mocholi Antonio1,Urchueguia Javier1,Hervas Antonio5,Reynes Gaspar6,Font-de-Mora Jaime6,Muñoz-Langa Jose2,Botella Carlos2,Aparici Fernando2,Marti-Bonmati Luis2,Garcia-Gomez Juan M.1

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Aplicaciones de las Tecnologias de la Informaciony de las Comunicaciones Avanzadas (ITACA), Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Camino de Vera s/n, 46022 Valencia, Spain

2. GIBI230 (Grupo de Investigacion Biomedica en Imagen), Instituto de Investigacion Sanitaria (IIS), Hospital la Fe, Valencia, Spain

3. Department of Radiology, Hospital Quironsalud Valencia, Valencia, Spain

4. Department of Radiology, Hospital de Manises, Valencia, Spain

5. Instituto de Matematica Multidisciplinar (IMM), Universitat Politecnica de Valencia, Valencia, Spain

6. Grupo de Investigacion Clinica y Traslacional del Cancer, Instituto de Investigacion Sanitaria (IIS), Hospital la Fe, Valencia, Spain

Abstract

Purpose: To systematically review evidence regarding the association of multiparametric biomarkers with clinical outcomes and their capacity to explain relevant subcompartments of gliomas. Materials and Methods: Scopus database was searched for original journal papers from January 1st, 2007 to February 20th, 2017 according to PRISMA. Four hundred forty-nine abstracts of papers were reviewed and scored independently by two out of six authors. Based on those papers we analyzed associations between biomarkers, subcompartments within the tumor lesion, and clinical outcomes. From all the articles analyzed, the twenty-seven papers with the highest scores were highlighted to represent the evidence about MR imaging biomarkers associated with clinical outcomes. Similarly, eighteen studies defining subcompartments within the tumor region were also highlighted to represent the evidence of MR imaging biomarkers. Their reports were critically appraised according to the QUADAS-2 criteria. Results: It has been demonstrated that multi-parametric biomarkers are prepared for surrogating diagnosis, grading, segmentation, overall survival, progression-free survival, recurrence, molecular profiling and response to treatment in gliomas. Quantifications and radiomics features obtained from morphological exams (T1, T2, FLAIR, T1c), PWI (including DSC and DCE), diffusion (DWI, DTI) and chemical shift imaging (CSI) are the preferred MR biomarkers associated to clinical outcomes. Subcompartments relative to the peritumoral region, invasion, infiltration, proliferation, mass effect and pseudo flush, relapse compartments, gross tumor volumes, and highrisk regions have been defined to characterize the heterogeneity. For the majority of pairwise cooccurrences, we found no evidence to assert that observed co-occurrences were significantly different from their expected co-occurrences (Binomial test with False Discovery Rate correction, α=0.05). The co-occurrence among terms in the studied papers was found to be driven by their individual prevalence and trends in the literature. Conclusion: Combinations of MR imaging biomarkers from morphological, PWI, DWI and CSI exams have demonstrated their capability to predict clinical outcomes in different management moments of gliomas. Whereas morphologic-derived compartments have been mostly studied during the last ten years, new multi-parametric MRI approaches have also been proposed to discover specific subcompartments of the tumors. MR biomarkers from those subcompartments show the local behavior within the heterogeneous tumor and may quantify the prognosis and response to treatment of gliomas.

Funder

Spanish Ministry for Investigation, Development and Innovation

Publisher

Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.

Subject

Radiology Nuclear Medicine and imaging

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