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Article Abstract

Objectives: To evaluate the utility of amide proton transfer-weighted (APTw) MRI imaging and its derived radiomics in classifying adult-type diffuse glioma.

Materials And Methods: In this prospective study, APTw imaging was performed on 129 patients with adult-type diffuse gliomas. The mean APTw-related metrics (chemical exchange saturation transfer ratio (CESTR), CESTR normalized with the reference value (CESTR), and relaxation-compensated inverse magnetization transfer ratio (MTR)) and radiomic features within 3D tumor masks were extracted. APTw-radiomics models were developed using a support vector machine (SVM) classifier. Sensitivity analysis with tumor area of interest, different histogram cutoff values, and other classifiers were conducted.

Results: CESTR, CESTR, and MTR in glioblastomas were all significantly higher (p < 0.0003) than those of oligodendrogliomas and astrocytomas, with no significant difference between oligodendrogliomas and astrocytomas. The APTw-related metrics for IDH-wildtype and high-grade gliomas were significantly higher (p < 0.001) than those for the IDH-mutant and low-grade gliomas, with area under the curve (AUCs) of 0.88 for CESTR. The CESTR-radiomics models demonstrated accuracies of 84% (AUC 0.87), 83% (AUC 0.83), 90% (AUC 0.95), and 84% (AUC 0.86) in predicting the IDH mutation status, differentiating glioblastomas from astrocytomas, distinguishing glioblastomas from oligodendrogliomas, and determining high/low grade prediction, respectively, but showed poor performance in distinguishing oligodendrogliomas from astrocytomas (accuracy 63%, AUC 0.63). The sensitivity analysis affirmed the robustness of the APTw signal and APTw-derived radiomics prediction models.

Conclusion: APTw imaging, along with its derived radiomics, presents a promising quantitative approach for prediction IDH mutation and grading adult-type diffuse glioma.

Clinical Relevance Statement: Amide proton transfer-weighted imaging, a quantitative imaging biomarker, coupled with its derived radiomics, offers a promising non-invasive approach for predicting IDH mutation status and grading adult-type diffuse gliomas, thereby informing individualized clinical diagnostics and treatment strategies.

Key Points: • This study evaluates the differences of different amide proton transfer-weighted metrics across three molecular subtypes and their efficacy in classifying adult-type diffuse glioma. • Chemical exchange saturation transfer ratio normalized with the reference value and relaxation-compensated inverse magnetization transfer ratio effectively predicts IDH mutation/grading, notably the first one. • Amide proton transfer-weighted imaging and its derived radiomics holds potential to be used as a diagnostic tool in routine clinical characterizing adult-type diffuse glioma.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00330-023-10343-6DOI Listing

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