| Literature DB >> 29340285 |
Matthew S Brown1,2, Grace Hyun J Kim1,2, Gregory H Chu1, Bharath Ramakrishna1,2, Martin Allen-Auerbach3, Cheryce P Fischer2, Benjamin Levine2, Pawan K Gupta2, Christiaan W Schiepers3, Jonathan G Goldin1,2.
Abstract
A clinical validation of the bone scan lesion area (BSLA) as a quantitative imaging biomarker was performed in metastatic castration-resistant prostate cancer (mCRPC). BSLA was computed from whole-body bone scintigraphy at baseline and week 12 posttreatment in a cohort of 198 mCRPC subjects (127 treated and 71 placebo) from a clinical trial involving a different drug from the initial biomarker development. BSLA computation involved automated image normalization, lesion segmentation, and summation of the total area of segmented lesions on bone scan AP and PA views as a measure of tumor burden. As a predictive biomarker, treated subjects with baseline BSLA [Formula: see text] had longer survival than those with higher BSLA ([Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]). As a surrogate outcome biomarker, subjects were categorized as progressive disease (PD) if the BSLA increased by a prespecified 30% or more from baseline to week 12 and non-PD otherwise. Overall survival rates between PD and non-PD groups were statistically different ([Formula: see text] and [Formula: see text]). Subjects without PD at week 12 had longer survival than subjects with PD: median 398 days versus 280 days. BSLA has now been demonstrated to be an early surrogate outcome for overall survival in different prostate cancer drug treatments.Entities:
Keywords: bone scan; computer-aided diagnosis; prostate cancer
Year: 2018 PMID: 29340285 PMCID: PMC5764115 DOI: 10.1117/1.JMI.5.1.011017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Imaging (Bellingham) ISSN: 2329-4302
Fig. 1Automated anatomical region segmentation of ribs/head (red), spine/sternum (yellow), pelvis (green), extremities (blue), shoulders (magenta), kidney search region (cyan), and bladder search region (orange).
Fig. 2Example cases with lesions segmented in red and BSLA change assessment.
Fig. 3Kaplan–Meier plots for low BSLA () versus high BSLA () as (a) prognostic factor and (b) predictive biomarker.
Median survival in days after week 12, with number of subjects in each group (adjusting for baseline BSLA score ).
| Median ( | PD by BSLA | Non-PD by BSLA |
|---|---|---|
| Placebo group | 186 ( | 170 ( |
| Treatment group | 260 ( | 392 ( |
| All | 228 ( | 378 ( |
Fig. 4Survival plots for non-PD versus PD by BSLA at week 12 in control (placebo) and treatment groups after adjustment of baseline BSLA score .
Multivariate Cox regression for survival.
| Coefficient | HZ ( | p-value | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Treatment | 0.49 ( | 0.002 | [0.32, 0.76] |
| Baseline BSLA | 0.34 ( | [0.20, 0.58] | |
| Interaction between treatment and BSLA | 2.15 ( | 0.019 | [1.14, 4.08] |
| Non-PD | 0.64 ( | 0.007 | [0.46, 0.88] |