A multicenter study on radiomic features from T 2 ‐weighted images of a customized MR pelvic phantom setting the basis for robust radiomic models in clinics

To investigate the repeatability and reproducibility of radiomic features extracted from MR images and provide a workflow to identify robust features. T -weighted images of a pelvic phantom were acquired on three scanners of two manufacturers and two magnetic field strengths. The repeatability and r...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inMagnetic resonance in medicine Vol. 85; no. 3; pp. 1713 - 1726
Main Authors Bianchini, Linda, Santinha, João, Loução, Nuno, Figueiredo, Mário, Botta, Francesca, Origgi, Daniela, Cremonesi, Marta, Cassano, Enrico, Papanikolaou, Nikolaos, Lascialfari, Alessandro
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.03.2021
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Summary:To investigate the repeatability and reproducibility of radiomic features extracted from MR images and provide a workflow to identify robust features. T -weighted images of a pelvic phantom were acquired on three scanners of two manufacturers and two magnetic field strengths. The repeatability and reproducibility of features were assessed by the intraclass correlation coefficient and the concordance correlation coefficient, respectively, and by the within-subject coefficient of variation, considering repeated acquisitions with and without phantom repositioning, and with different scanner and acquisition parameters. The features showing intraclass correlation coefficient or concordance correlation coefficient >0.9 were selected, and their dependence on shape information (Spearman's ρ > 0.8) analyzed. They were classified for their ability to distinguish textures, after shuffling voxel intensities of images. From 944 two-dimensional features, 79.9% to 96.4% showed excellent repeatability in fixed position across all scanners. A much lower range (11.2% to 85.4%) was obtained after phantom repositioning. Three-dimensional extraction did not improve repeatability performance. Excellent reproducibility between scanners was observed in 4.6% to 15.6% of the features, at fixed imaging parameters. In addition, 82.4% to 94.9% of the features showed excellent agreement when extracted from images acquired with echo times 5 ms apart, but decreased with increasing echo-time intervals, and 90.7% of the features exhibited excellent reproducibility for changes in pulse repetition time. Of nonshape features, 2.0% was identified as providing only shape information. We showed that radiomic features are affected by MRI protocols and propose a general workflow to identify repeatable, reproducible, and informative radiomic features to ensure robustness of clinical studies.
ISSN:0740-3194
1522-2594
DOI:10.1002/mrm.28521