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. 2024 Jan;34(1):182-192.
doi: 10.1007/s00330-023-10102-7. Epub 2023 Aug 11.

Voxel-wise mapping of DCE-MRI time-intensity-curve profiles enables visualizing and quantifying hemodynamic heterogeneity in breast lesions

Affiliations

Voxel-wise mapping of DCE-MRI time-intensity-curve profiles enables visualizing and quantifying hemodynamic heterogeneity in breast lesions

Zhou Liu et al. Eur Radiol. 2024 Jan.

Abstract

Objectives: To propose a novel model-free data-driven approach based on the voxel-wise mapping of DCE-MRI time-intensity-curve (TIC) profiles for quantifying and visualizing hemodynamic heterogeneity and to validate its potential clinical applications.

Materials and methods: From December 2018 to July 2022, 259 patients with 325 pathologically confirmed breast lesions who underwent breast DCE-MRI were retrospectively enrolled. Based on the manually segmented breast lesions, the TIC of each voxel within the 3D whole lesion was classified into 19 subtypes based on wash-in rate (nonenhanced, slow, medium, and fast), wash-out enhancement (persistent, plateau, and decline), and wash-out stability (steady and unsteady), and the composition ratio of these 19 subtypes for each lesion was calculated as a new feature set (type-19). The three-type TIC classification, semiquantitative parameters, and type-19 features were used to build machine learning models for identifying lesion malignancy and classifying histologic grades, proliferation status, and molecular subtypes.

Results: The type-19 feature-based model significantly outperformed models based on the three-type TIC method and semiquantitative parameters both in distinguishing lesion malignancy (respectively; AUC = 0.875 vs. 0.831, p = 0.01 and 0.875vs. 0.804, p = 0.03), predicting tumor proliferation status (AUC = 0.890 vs. 0.548, p = 0.006 and 0.890 vs. 0.596, p = 0.020), but not in predicting histologic grades (p = 0.820 and 0.970).

Conclusion: In addition to conventional methods, the proposed computational approach provides a novel, model-free, data-driven approach to quantify and visualize hemodynamic heterogeneity.

Clinical relevance statement: Voxel-wise intra-lesion mapping of TIC profiles allows for visualization of hemodynamic heterogeneity and its composition ratio for differentiation of malignant and benign breast lesions.

Key points: • Voxel-wise TIC profiles were mapped, and their composition ratio was compared between various breast lesions. • The model based on the composition ratio of voxel-wise TIC profiles significantly outperformed the three-type TIC classification model and the semiquantitative parameters model in lesion malignancy differentiation and tumor proliferation status prediction in breast lesions. • This novel, data-driven approach allows the intuitive visualization and quantification of the hemodynamic heterogeneity of breast lesions.

Keywords: Breast cancer; DCE-MRI; Hemodynamic heterogeneity; Time-intensity-curve profiles.

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