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Gross tumour volume delineation in anal cancer on T2-weighted and diffusion-weighted MRI - Reproducibility between radiologists and radiation oncologists and impact of reader experience level and DWI image quality.

Lisa A Min ,
Younan J L Vacher ,
Luc Dewit ,
Mila Donker ,
Carmelo Sofia ,
Baukelien van Triest ,
Paula Bos ,
Joost J W van Griethuysen ,
Monique Maas ,
Regina G H Beets-Tan ,
Doenja M J Lambregts

Abstract

METHODS AND MATERIALS

We retrospectively analyzed the MRIs (T2W-MRI and b800-DWI) of 25 anal cancer patients. Four readers (Senior and Junior Radiologist; Senior and Junior Radiation Oncologist) independently delineated GTVs, first on T2W-MRI only and then on DWI (with reference to T2W-MRI). Maximum Tumour Diameter (MTD) was calculated from each GTV. Mean GTVs/MTDs were compared between readers and between T2W-MRI vs. DWI. Interobserver agreement was calculated as Intraclass Correlation Coefficient (ICC), Dice Similarity Coefficient (DSC) and Hausdorff Distance (HD). DWI image quality was assessed using a 5-point artefact scale.

CONCLUSION

Overall interobserver agreement for anal cancer GTV delineation on MRI is good for both radiologists and radiation oncologists, regardless of experience level. Use of DWI did not improve agreement. DWI artefacts affecting GTV delineation occurred in almost half of the patients, which may severely limit the use of DWI for radiotherapy planning if no steps are undertaken to avoid them.

RESULTS

Interobserver agreement between radiologists vs. radiation oncologists and between junior vs. senior readers was good-excellent, with similar agreement for T2W-MRI and DWI (e.g. ICCs 0.72-0.94 for T2W-MRI and 0.68-0.89 for DWI). There was a trend towards smaller GTVs on DWI, but only for the radiologists (P = 0.03-0.07). Moderate-severe DWI-artefacts were observed in 11/25 (44%) cases. Agreement tended to be lower in these cases.

PURPOSE

To assess how gross tumour volume (GTV) delineation in anal cancer is affected by interobserver variations between radiologists and radiation oncologists, expertise level, and use of T2-weighted MRI (T2W-MRI) vs. diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), and to explore effects of DWI quality.

More about this publication

Radiotherapy and oncology : journal of the European Society for Therapeutic Radiology and Oncology

Volume 150
Pages 81-88
Publication date 01-09-2020

Full text links

Publisher website (DOI) 10.1016/j.radonc.2020.06.012
Europe PubMed Central 32540336
Pubmed 32540336

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