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Reliability as a Precondition for Trust-Segmentation Reliability Analysis of Radiomic Features Improves Survival Prediction.

Gustav Müller-FranzesSven NebelungJustus SchockChristoph HaarburgerFiras KhaderFederico PedersoliMaximilian Franz Schulze-HagenChristiane KuhlDaniel Truhn
Published in: Diagnostics (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Machine learning results based on radiomic analysis are often not transferrable. A potential reason for this is the variability of radiomic features due to varying human made segmentations. Therefore, the aim of this study was to provide comprehensive inter-reader reliability analysis of radiomic features in five clinical image datasets and to assess the association of inter-reader reliability and survival prediction. In this study, we analyzed 4598 tumor segmentations in both computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging data. We used a neural network to generate 100 additional segmentation outlines for each tumor and performed a reliability analysis of radiomic features. To prove clinical utility, we predicted patient survival based on all features and on the most reliable features. Survival prediction models for both computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging datasets demonstrated less statistical spread and superior survival prediction when based on the most reliable features. Mean concordance indices were C mean = 0.58 [most reliable] vs. C mean = 0.56 [all] ( p < 0.001, CT) and C mean = 0.58 vs. C mean = 0.57 ( p = 0.23, MRI). Thus, preceding reliability analyses and selection of the most reliable radiomic features improves the underlying model's ability to predict patient survival across clinical imaging modalities and tumor entities.
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