Imaging phenotypes from MRI for the prediction of glioma immune subtypes from RNA sequencing: a multicenter study.
Jingxian DuanZhenyu ZhangYinsheng ChenYuanshen ZhaoQiuchang SunWeiwei WangHairong ZhengDong LiangJingliang ChengJing YanZhi-Cheng LiPublished in: Molecular oncology (2023)
Tumor subtyping based on its immune landscape may guide precision immunotherapy. The aims of this study were to identify immune subtypes of adult diffuse gliomas with RNA sequencing data, and to non-invasively predict this subtype using a biologically interpretable radiomic signature from MRI. A subtype discovery dataset (n = 210) from a public database and two radiogenomic datasets (n = 130 and 55 respectively) from two local hospitals were included. Brain tumor microenvironment-specific signatures were constructed from RNA sequencing to identify the immune types. A radiomic signature was built from MRI to predict the identified immune subtypes. The pathways underlying the radiomic signature were identified to annotate their biological meanings. The reproducibility of the findings was verified externally in multicenter datasets. Three distinctive immune subtypes were identified, including an inflamed subtype marked by elevated hypoxia-induced immunosuppression, a 'cold' subtype that exhibited scarce immune infiltration with down-regulated antigen presentation, and an intermediate subtype that showed medium immune infiltration. A ten-feature radiomic signature was developed to predict immune subtypes, achieving an AUC of 0.924 in the validation dataset. The radiomic features correlated with biological functions underpinning immune suppression, which substantiated the hypothesis that molecular changes can be reflected by radiomic features. The immune subtypes, predictive radiomic signature, and radiomics-correlated biological pathways were validated externally. Our data suggest that adult-type diffuse gliomas harbor three distinctive immune subtypes that can be predicted by MRI radiomic features with clear biological significance. The immune subtypes, radiomic signature, and radiogenomic links can be replicated externally.
Keyphrases
- magnetic resonance imaging
- emergency department
- healthcare
- contrast enhanced
- single cell
- computed tomography
- young adults
- machine learning
- magnetic resonance
- clinical trial
- artificial intelligence
- high grade
- transcription factor
- small molecule
- high resolution
- multiple sclerosis
- rna seq
- brain injury
- low grade
- dna methylation
- case report
- mental health
- mass spectrometry
- subarachnoid hemorrhage