Title of article :
Quantitative Radiomics: Impact of Pulse Sequence Parameter Selection on MRI-Based Textural Features of the Brain
Author/Authors :
Ford, John Department of Radiation Oncology - University of Miami Miller School of Medicine - Miami, USA , Dogan, Nesrin Department of Radiation Oncology - University of Miami Miller School of Medicine - Miami, USA , Young, Lori Department of Radiation Oncology - University of Washington - Seattle, USA , Yang, Fei Department of Radiation Oncology - University of Miami Miller School of Medicine - Miami, USA
Abstract :
Radiomic features extracted from diverse MRI modalities have been investigated regarding their predictive and/or
prognostic value in a variety of cancers. With the aid of a 3D realistic digital MRI phantom of the brain, the aim of this study was to
examine the impact of pulse sequence parameter selection on MRI-based textural parameters of the brain. Methods. MR images of
the employed digital phantom were realized with SimuBloch, a simulation package made for fast generation of image sequences
based on the Bloch equations. Pulse sequences being investigated consisted of spin echo (SE), gradient echo (GRE), spoiled
gradient echo (SP-GRE), inversion recovery spin echo (IR-SE), and inversion recovery gradient echo (IR-GRE). Twenty-nine
radiomic textural features related, respectively, to gray-level intensity histograms (GLIH), cooccurrence matrices (GLCOM), zone
size matrices (GLZSM), and neighborhood difference matrices (GLNDM) were evaluated for the obtained MR realizations, and
differences were identified. Results. It was found that radiomic features vary considerably among images generated by the five
different T1-weighted pulse sequences, and the deviations from those measured on the T1 map vary among features, from a few
percent to over 100%. Radiomic features extracted from T1-weighted spin-echo images with TR varying from 360 ms to 620 ms
and TE = 3.4 ms showed coe¢cients of variation (CV) up to 45%, while up to 70%, for T2-weighted spin-echo images with TE
varying over the range 60–120 ms and TR = 6400 ms. Conclusion. Variability of radiologic textural appearance on MR realizations
with respect to the choice of pulse sequence and imaging parameters is feature-dependent and can be substantial. It calls for
caution in employing MRI-derived radiomic features especially when pooling imaging data from multiple institutions with
intention of correlating with clinical endpoints.
Keywords :
MRI , Brain , GLIH , Multifarious
Journal title :
Contrast Media and Molecular Imaging