Combination of DCE-MRI and NME-DWI via Deep Neural Network for Predicting Breast Cancer Molecular Subtypes

To explore whether the combination of dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and nonmono-exponential (NME) model-based diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) via deep neural network (DNN) can improve the prediction of breast cancer molecular subtypes compared to either imaging te...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical breast cancer 2024-07, Vol.24 (5), p.e417-e427
Hauptverfasser: Ba, Zhi-Chang, Zhang, Hong-Xia, Liu, Ao-Yu, Zhou, Xin-Xiang, Liu, Lu, Wang, Xin-Yi, Nanding, Abiyasi, Sang, Xi-Qiao, Kuai, Zi-Xiang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To explore whether the combination of dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and nonmono-exponential (NME) model-based diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) via deep neural network (DNN) can improve the prediction of breast cancer molecular subtypes compared to either imaging technique used alone. This prospective study examined 480 breast cancers in 475 patients undergoing DCE-MRI and NME-DWI at 3.0 T. Breast cancers were classified as follows: human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 enriched (HER2-enriched), luminal A, luminal B (HER2–), luminal B (HER2+), and triple-negative subtypes. A total of 20% cases were withheld as an independent test dataset, and the remaining cases were used to train DNN with an 80% to 20% training-validation split and 5-fold cross-validation. The diagnostic accuracies of DNN in 5-way subtype classification between the DCE-MRI, NME-DWI, and their combined multiparametric-MRI datasets were compared using analysis of variance with least significant difference posthoc test. Areas under the receiver-operating characteristic curves were calculated to assess the performances of DNN in binary subtype classification between the 3 datasets. The 5-way classification accuracies of DNN on both DCE-MRI (0.71) and NME-DWI (0.64) were significantly lower (P < .05) than on multiparametric-MRI (0.76), while on DCE-MRI was significantly higher (P < .05) than on NME-DWI. The comparative results of binary classification between the 3 datasets were consistent with the 5-way classification. The combination of DCE-MRI and NME-DWI via DNN achieved a significant improvement in breast cancer molecular subtype prediction compared to either imaging technique used alone. Additionally, DCE-MRI outperformed NME-DWI in differentiating subtypes. This study assessed the performance of the combination of DCE-MRI and NME-DWI via DNN on the prediction of breast cancer molecular subtypes. A total of 475 breast cancer patients were prospectively included. The combination of the 2 imaging techniques showed better performance in predicting subtypes than either imaging technique used alone. In addition, DCE-MRI outperformed NME-DWI in subtype prediction.
ISSN:1526-8209
1938-0666
1938-0666
DOI:10.1016/j.clbc.2024.03.006