Glioblastoma Pseudoprogression Discrimination Using Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Principal Component Analysis, and Supervised and Unsupervised Machine Learning.

José Luis Thenier-Villa,Francisco Ramón Martínez-Ricarte, Margarita Figueroa-Vezirian, Fuat Arikan-Abelló

World neurosurgery(2024)

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摘要
BACKGROUND:One of the most frequent phenomena in the follow-up of glioblastoma is pseudoprogression, present in up to half of cases. The clinical usefulness of discriminating this phenomenon through magnetic resonance imaging and nuclear medicine has not yet been standardized; in this study, we used machine learning on multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging to explore discriminators of this phenomenon. METHODS:For the study, 30 patients diagnosed with IDH wild-type glioblastoma operated on at both study centers in 2011-2020 were selected; 15 patients corresponded to early tumor progression and 15 patients to pseudoprogression. Using unsupervised learning, the number of clusters and tumor segmentation was recorded using gap-stat and k-means method, adjusting to voxel adjacency. In a second phase, a class prediction was carried out with a multinomial logistic regression supervised learning method; the outcome variables were the percentage of assignment, class overrepresentation, and degree of voxel adjacency. RESULTS:Unsupervised learning of the tumor in its diagnosis shows up to 14 well-differentiated tumor areas. In the supervised learning phase, there is a higher percentage of assigned classes (P < 0.01), less overrepresentation of classes (P < 0.01), and greater adjacency (55% vs. 33%) in cases of true tumor progression compared with pseudoprogression. CONCLUSIONS:True tumor progression preserves the multidimensional characteristics of the basal tumor at the voxel and region of interest level, resulting in a characteristic differential pattern when supervised learning is used.
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