The textures of sarcoidosis: quantifying lung disease through variograms

Author:

Lippitt William L.ORCID,Maier Lisa A.,Fingerlin Tasha E.ORCID,Lynch David A.ORCID,Yadav RuchiORCID,Rieck JaredORCID,Hill Andrew C.,Liao Shu-YiORCID,Mroz Margaret M.,Barkes Briana Q.,Chae Kum JuORCID,Hwang Hye JeonORCID,Carlson Nichole E.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractObjectiveSarcoidosis is a granulomatous disease affecting the lungs in over 90% of patients. Qualitative assessment of chest CT by radiologists is standard clinical practice and reliable quantification of disease from CT would support ongoing efforts to identify sarcoidosis phenotypes. Standard imaging feature engineering techniques such as radiomics suffer from extreme sensitivity to image acquisition and processing, potentially impeding generalizability of research to clinical populations. In this work, we instead investigate approaches to engineering variogram-based features with the intent to identify a robust, generalizable pipeline for image quantification in the study of sarcoidosis.ApproachFor a cohort of more than 300 individuals with sarcoidosis, we investigated 24 feature engineering pipelines differing by decisions for image registration to a template lung, empirical and model variogram estimation methods, and feature harmonization for CT scanner model, and subsequently 48 sets of phenotypes produced through unsupervised clustering. We then assessed sensitivity of engineered features, phenotypes produced through unsupervised clustering, and sarcoidosis disease signal strength to pipeline.Main resultsWe found that variogram features had low to mild association with scanner model and associations were reduced by image registration. For each feature type, features were also typically robust to all pipeline decisions except image registration. Strength of disease signal as measured by association with pulmonary function testing and some radiologist visual assessments was strong (optimistic AUC ≈ 0.9,p≪ 0.0001 in models for architectural distortion, conglomerate mass, fibrotic abnormality, and traction bronchiectasis) and fairly consistent across engineering approaches regardless of registration and harmonization for CT scanner.SignificanceVariogram-based features appear to be a suitable approach to image quantification in support of generalizable research in pulmonary sarcoidosis.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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