Literature DB >> 30021656

Diffusion-weighted imaging in monitoring the pathological response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients with breast cancer: a meta-analysis.

Wen Gao1, Ning Guo2, Ting Dong3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) is suggested as an non-invasive and non-radioactive imaging modality in the identification of pathological complete response (pCR) in breast cancer patients receiving neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT). A growing number of trials have been investigating in this aspect and some studies found a superior performance of DWI compared with conventional imaging techniques. However, the efficiency of DWI is still in dispute. This meta-analysis aims at evaluating the accuracy of DWI in the detection of pCR to NACT in patients with breast cancer.
METHODS: Pooled sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic odds ratio (DOR) were drawn to estimate the diagnostic effect of DWI to NACT. Summary receiver operating characteristic curve (SROC), the area under the SROC curve (AUC), and Youden index (*Q) were also calculated. The possible sources of heterogeneity among the included studies were explored using single-factor meta-regression analyses. Publication bias and quality assessment were assessed using Deek's funnel plot and QUADAS-2 form respectively.
RESULTS: Twenty studies incorporated 1490 participants were enrolled in our analysis. Pooled estimates revealed a sensitivity of 0.89 (95% CI, 0.86-0.91), a specificity of 0.72 (95% CI, 0.68-0.75), and a DOR of 27.00 (95% CI, 15.60-46.73). The AUC of SROC curve and *Q index were 0.9088 and 0.8408, respectively. The results of meta-regression analyses showed that pCR rate, time duration of study population, and study design were not the sources of heterogeneity.
CONCLUSION: A relatively high sensitivity and specificity of DWI in diagnosing pCP for patients with breast cancer underwent NACT treatment was found in our meta-analysis. This finding indicated that the use of DWI might provide an accurate and precise assessment of pCR to NACT.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Breast cancer; Diffusion-weighted imaging; Meta-analysis; Neoadjuvant chemotherapy; Pathological response

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30021656      PMCID: PMC6052572          DOI: 10.1186/s12957-018-1438-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World J Surg Oncol        ISSN: 1477-7819            Impact factor:   2.754


Background

Neoadjuvant chemotherapy (NACT), since its first appearance until nowadays, has become a standard therapy for patients with breast cancer. It is suggested to have beneficial effect especially on locally advanced or inflammatory breast cancer [1]. The major benefit of NACT is to reduce the tumor size and to downstage the tumor burden, which may lead to the successful performance of breast-conserving surgery instead of mastectomy [2]. In addition, assessing the treatment responses to NACT can also help to determine the right time to perform the operation or to adjust the therapy regimen in case of an unfavorable tumor response at an early stage [3]. It is well-established in some previous studies that the response to NACT is correlated with long-term outcomes for breast cancer patients. Studies also reveal that pathological complete response (pCR) patients may have a superior chance to achieved disease-free survival and overall survival [4-6]. Nevertheless, only a minority of patients were featured with pCR due to the heterogeneity of breast cancer. We could not accurately observe the pCR until the definitive breast surgery was completed, which always led to inappropriate surgery decision-making for patients [7, 8]. Therefore, it is crucial to find an effective method to separate the patients who have achieved pCR from pathological non-responders (pNR) before surgery. Mammography, ultrasonography, positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET/CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) are the most commonly applied conventional imaging techniques for the detection of NACT responses. Previous studies found that MRI was superior to mammography or ultrasonography in evaluating therapeutic response of NACT in breast cancer [9, 10]. A meta-analysis demonstrated a higher sensitivity in PET/CT and a higher specificity in MRI for the assessment of pCR [11]. Currently, contrast-enhanced magnetic resonance imaging (DCE-MRI) is frequently and commonly used for tumor response evaluation after NACT. However, the information provided by DCE-MRI regarding blood flow and vessel permeability might cause difficulty in differentiating viable residual cancer form surrounding scar, necrosis, fibrosis, or reactive inflammation resulting from NACT response. Thus, DCE-MRI has deficiencies for the examination of pathological response to NACT [12]. Diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), with its unique tissue contrast mechanism, is regarded as a potential modality to overcome the limitations of traditional DCE-MRI evaluation [13]. DWI reveals the thermally driven motion of water molecules in the target tissue. It offers information concerning the integrity of cell membranes and cancer cellularity. The apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC), which can be quantified and measured on DWI, represents the complex diffusion of water in tissues [14]. With those characteristics, DWI can be sensitive in detecting the changes in the intratumor induced by NACT [15]. The accuracy of conventional imaging modality including MRI, PET/CT, mammography, and ultrasonography in the assessment of the pCR to NACT has been investigated by several recent meta-analyses [16-19]. However, no previous study has focused on analyzing the performance of DWI in detecting the pCR in breast cancer to NACT systematically. In researches providing DWI evaluation, the data were limited. They only involved a small amount of studies which might weaken the statistic power of the analysis. By combining all available data, the present meta-analysis intended to evaluate the diagnostic role of DWI in monitoring pCR in breast cancer to NACT.

Method

Literature search

Databases PubMed and EMBASE were systematically searched from database inception to August 2017 for all the potential publications. Articles in regard to DWI assessing tumor response in patients with breast cancer underwent NACT treatment were retrieved using the following search terms: “diffusion-weighted imaging” or “DW-MRI” or “DWI,” “breast cancer” or “breast tumor” or “breast,” “response” or “prediction,” “neoadjuvant chemotherapy” or “chemotherapy” or “NACT,” “diagnosis” or “accuracy” or “performance.” One reviewer screened all the titles and abstracts for eligibility. The remaining studies after removing the duplications and non-related articles were examined in full text by a second reviewer. Reference list of the enrolled studies and other meta-analyses were searched manually for any additional publication that was not included in the original search. Articles published in English and Chinese were eligible for inclusion.

Eligibility criteria

Studies were considered as usable if they met the following criteria: (1) patients were diagnosed with breast cancer and received NACT treatment; (2) DWI scan should be performed before and during (after) NACT; (3) studies provided available data of true positive (TP), true negative (TN), false positive (FP), false negative (FN), sensitivity and specificity findings, either directly or indirectly; (4) studies that with different additional surgery or other adjunctive treatment were all considered available. We excluded studies with inseparable combined data of different diagnostic methods, duplicated articles, reviews, case reports, and other non-related studies.

Data extraction

The following information were extracted in the process of full-text review of the eligible studies: first author, region where the study took place, year of publication, patients’ demographic (sample size, gender, age) and clinical characteristics (disease stages, histologic subtype), chemotherapeutic regimens used in NACT, cycles of NACT, image interpretation (blinded or not), magnet strength of DWI, timing of DWI evaluation, applied surgery after NACT, reference standard of pathologic response, definition of pCR, and number of complete responders and non-responders. The number of TP, TN, FP, and FN was obtained from the pathological results of the DWI scan. Two independent reviewers carried out the data extraction process, and discrepancies were solved by discussion till consensus was reached.

Quality assessment

The updated version of quality assessment of diagnosis accuracy study form (QUADAS-2) was used in the assessment of methodological quality of the enrolled studies. This appliance was specifically developed for systematic review and meta-analysis of diagnostic accuracy studies [20]. The QUADAS-2 test contains four aspects of questions: patients’ selection, index text, reference standard, and flow and timing. Risk of bias was assessed in all fields, and the concerns regarding applicability was evaluated in the first three domains. The signaling questions of each key domain can help in judging studies as having high, low, or unclear risk.

Statistical analysis

A 2-by-2 contingency table separating patients into TP, TN, FP, and FN groups was constructed for each enrolled study. Based on this table, sensitivity and specificity were calculated. Diagnostic odds ratio (DOR) was measured to estimate the effectiveness of DWI by calculating the odds of achieving pCR in patients with a positive test result to patients with a negative test result. The area under the curve (AUC) of the summary receiver operating characteristic curve (SROC) was calculated to measure the performance of DWI. An AUC close to 1 indicates a favorable diagnostic performance, whereas a close to 0.5 AUC implies a poor test result. The Youden index (*Q), which is used in conjunction with SROC analysis and recognized as a preferred statistic to reflect the diagnostic value, were also assessed. A *Q index of 1 indicates a perfect test result. All data analyses were carried out using statistical software package Meta-DiSc 1.4 and Stata version 15.0. The heterogeneity among studies was evaluated with chi-squared test and I2 statistics. A random effects model was used for outcome estimation if I2 < 50%, and a fixed effects model was chosen if I2 > 50%. Threshold effect was one of the important sources of heterogeneity in diagnostic accuracy test. The Spearman correlation coefficients can determine the existence of threshold effect. It indicated no threshold effects among studies if P value > 0.05. Then, the bivariate mixed-effect models were used to draw the forest plot and SROC. In addition, heterogeneity caused by non-threshold effect was also explored utilizing single-factor meta-regression analyses. We separated the studies into different subgroups, in terms of pCR rate (mean = 21%), the duration of the study population (midpoint = 2009), and whether the image interpretation was blinded. Variances were considered as sources of heterogeneity if their regression coefficients reached statistical significance (P < 0.05). Publication bias was analyzed using Deeks’ funnel plot and an asymmetry test. The absence of a non-zero slope coefficient (P > 0.05) indicates no publication bias exists among the included studies.

Results

Study selection

The systematic search and manual cross-checking of references yielded 648 articles in total from PubMed and EMBASE database initially. After excluding the obviously irrelevant articles according to titles and abstracts, 190 remained as potential candidates for inclusion. One hundred fifty-four articles were further ruled out as they disagreed with our inclusion criteria. An additional of 16 articles were excluded after careful full-text review. The reasons for exclusion were as follows: studies lacked of raw data (n = 4); the provided data were not sufficient to construct or calculate the contingency table (n = 7); studies presented repetitive data from author with additional studies (n = 5). Eventually, 20 studies were enrolled in the analysis. Figure 1 presented the procedure of literature search and study selection.
Fig. 1

Flow diagram of literature search

Flow diagram of literature search

Study description

The included 20 studies consisted a total of 1490 patients [7, 12, 21–38]. The sample size ranged from 28 to 225 (median 75) patients. Thirteen of the enrolled studies used a 1.5 T magnet strength and 6 used 3 T for measurement. The study of Mani et al. [30] did not provide information about the applied magnet strength. In more than a half of the studies, radiologists were blinded to the pathological data. The basic information of each included trail were described in Table 1. The classifications used to identify pathologic response after NACT were varied from study to study. Three studies utilized Miller-Payne grading system, another three studies applied Mandard’s tumor regression grade (TRG) criteria, one study used a Japanese Breast Cancer Society criteria, and one used the Chevalier-Sataloff classifications. The remaining articles applied a standard set by the researchers. Therefore, the definition of pCR after NACT of each study was not identical. Patients who reached Miller-Payne grade V, TRG 1, Japanese Breast Cancer Society grade 3, and Chevalier class 1, Sataloff A were classified as pCR in studies using the above criteria. Of the other 12 studies, 5 of them considered patients with no residual invasive cancer in the breast or lymph nodes as achieving pCR. Five studies defined pCR as the absence of invasive cancer and two studies defined pCR as the disappearance of recognizable invasive tumor cells but ductal carcinoma in situ (DCIS) may have been present. Breast-conserving surgery or mastectomy was performed in nine studies and lumpectomy or mastectomy was conducted in two studies. Four studies declared that patients received surgery after NACT treatment, but they did not clarify the type of surgery. The final five studies did not mention surgery after NACT. As for NACT regimens, patients in the same study or in different studies received diverse chemotherapy. The detailed information of NACT treatment of the enrolled literature were presented in Table 2.
Table 1

Basic characteristics of included studies

StudyYearStudy designNo. of casesAge (mean range)Disease stagesHistologic subtypeMagnet strenth (T)Duration of the patients (years, month)BlindTiming of evaluation
Agarwal2017NR3844.2(19–65)LABC, stage II/IIIIDC/DCIS1.5 TNRPre-NAC and after 1.3 cycles
Atuegwu2013NR2844.9 (28–67)Stage II/IIINR3.0 TNRPre-NAC and after 1 cycle, and post-NAC
Belli2011Pro5148.4 (26–66)NRIDC/ILC1.5 T2007.01–2009.01BlindPre-NAC and post-NAC within 4 weeks
Bufi2014Retro22547 (26–67)Stage II/IIIIDC/ILC1.5 T2007–2012BlindPre-NAC and post-NAC within 4 weeks
Bufi2015Retro22547 (26–67)LABC, stage II/III/IVIDC/ILC1.5 T2007–2012BlindPre-NAC and post-NAC within 4 weeks
Che2016NR3650.9 (27–75)LABCIDC/ILC3.0 T2014.03–2015.05BlindPre-NAC and after 2 cycles
Fangberget2010Pro3150.7 (37–72)Stage II/III/IVIDC/ILC1.5 T2007.04–2008.10BlindPre-NAC and after 4 cycles, and post-NAC
Fujimoto2013NR5650.9(27–70)Stage II/IIIIDC1.5 T2006.02–2009.12BlindPre-NAC and post-NAC within 3 weeks
Li2011Pro3246 (25–63)LABCNR1.5 T2007.07–2010.07Pre-NAC and after 1 cycle
Li2015Pro4246.8 (28–67)Stage II/IIINR3.0 TNRPre-NAC and after 1 cycle, post-NAC
Luo2014Retro7146.1 (29–72)NRIDC3.0 T2010.03–2012.12BlindPre-NAC, after 2 cycles and post-NAC
Mani2013NR2845 (28–67)Stage II/IIINRNRNRPre-NAC, after 1 cycle and post-NAC
StudyYearStudy designNo. of casesAge (mean range)Disease stagesHistologic subtypeMagnet strenth(T)Duration of the patients (year, months)BlindTiming of evaluation
Park2010Retro5343.7 (24–65)Stage II/IIIIDC/ILC1.5 T2007.03–2008.05BlindPre-NAC and after 3 cycles
Park2011Retro3444 (27–60)LABCIDC/ILC1.5 T2007.04–2008.05BlindPre-NAC and after 3–6 cycles
Richard2013Retro11853.2 (23–83)LABC, stage II/III/IVIDC/ILC1.5 T2008.07–2011.05BlindPre-NAC and post-NAC less than 2 weeks
Sharma2009Retro5648.5 (25–75)LABCIDC1.5 T2003.12–2006.12Pre-NAC and after 1, 2, 3 cycles
Shin2012Retro9046 (24–68)Stage I/II/IIIIDC/ILC1.5 T2009.01–2011.05Pre-NAC and post-NAC
Weis2015Retro3346 (28–67)Stage II/IIINR3.0 TNRPre-NAC, after 1 cycle and post-NAC
Woodhams2010NR69NRNRIDC/ILC1.5 T2005.01–2008.10BlindPre-NAC, after 4 cycles the post-NAC
Xu2017NR17445.7 (28–64)LABC, stage II/IIIIDC/ILC3.0 T2011.09–2014.12BlindPre-NAC, after 1 cycle and post-NAC

LABC locally advanced breast cancer; IDL invasive ductal carcinoma; ILC invasive lobular carcinoma; Pro prospective; Retro retrospective; NR not reported

Table 2

Characteristics of included studies for neoadjuvant chemotherapy

StudyYearNo. of casesClassification of pathologic responseDefinition of pCRNACT regimensSurgery after NACT
Agarwal201738Miller-PayneMiller-Payne grade VCEF, CAF, CEF + DE, DE, DC + Herceptin, DECModified radical mastectomy or wide local excision
Atuegwu201328No residual invasive cancer in the breast or lymph nodesAC + taxol, Taxotere, Taxol + cisplatin ± everolimus, Trastuzumab +carboplatin + ixabepilone, Trastuzumab, and lapatinibNR
Belli201151Mandard’s TRG criteriaTRG 1FEC, AT, TAC, and TC ± carboplatinum or trastuzumabSurgery
Bufi2014225Mandard’s TRG criteriaTRG 1Doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide, and taxanes-based regimensBreast-conserving and nipple sparing surgery; Surgical excision
Bufi2015225Mandard’s TRG criteriaTRG 1Doxorubicin, taxane, and cyclophosphamide-based regimensBreast-conserving and nipple sparing surgery; Surgical excision
Che201636Miller-PayneMiller-Payne grade VPaclitaxel with epirubicin or paclitaxel with carboplatinBreast-conserving surgery with axillary nodal clearance or modified radical mastectomy.
Fangberget201031Absence of invasive cancer5-fluoro-uracil, epirubicin and cyclophosphamideSurgery
Fujimoto201356Japanese Breast Cancer Society criteriaNecrosis or disappearance of all tumor cellsAdriamycin and cyclophosphamide, paclitaxel, 5-fluorouracil, epirubicin, and cyclophosphamide, paclitaxelLumpectomy or mastectomy
Li201132Absence of invasive cancer on breast tumor and lymph nodesDocetaxel and epirubicinBreast-conserving surgery or modified radical mastectomy
Li201542No invasive tumor in the breastDOX + Cyc + Tax, Cis/Tax±RAD001, Tra + Car, Tra/Car/Her, TaxMastectomy or lumpectomy
Luo201471Miller-PayneMiller-Payne grade VNRNR
Mani201328No residual tumor in the breast or lymph nodesAdriamycin/cytoxan, taxol/trastuzumab; docetaxel, carboplatin, and trastuzumab; or lapatinib and trastuzumabSurgery
Park201053Absence of recognizable invasive tumor cells (DCIS may have been present)Docetaxel and doxorubicin with granulocyte colony–stimulating factorModified radical mastectomy or breast-conserving surgery
Park201134No residual malignancy and no sign of cancer cells; no residual invasive cancer and DCIS presentDoxorubicin and docetaxel; paclitaxel, gemcitabine and trastuzumabModified radical mastectomy or breast-conserving surgery
Richard2013118Chevalier-Sataloff classificationsChevalier class 1, Sataloff AEpirubicin and cyclophosphamide, docetaxel; epirubicin and cyclophosphamide, trastuzumabMastectomy or breast-conservative surgery
Sharma200956No residual tumorCEF; PþENR
Shin201290No residual tumor or absence of invasive cancer, but presence of DCISDoxorubicin and cyclophosphamide; cyclophosphamide and docetaxel; adriamycin plus docetaxel; 5-fluorouracil, epirubicin and cyclophosphamide; trastuzumab plus paclitaxelSurgery
Weis201533No residual tumor in the breast or nodesPaclitaxel, carboplatin, and trastuzumab; doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide, paclitaxel; cisplatin and paclitaxel ± everolimusNR
Woodhams201069No residual disease or no invasive cancer or DCIS presentAnthracycline and cyclophosphamide, paclitaxelQuadrantectomy or mastectomy
Xu2017174No residual tumor in the breast or nodesCyclophosphamide + epirubicin and tatotereNR

Miller-Payne grade V, showed complete disappearance of malignant cells at the site of tumor with only vascular fibroelastotic stroma seen with macrophages; TRG 1, complete regression, absence of residual tumor cells; Chevalier class 1, disappearance of all tumors on either macroscopic or microscopic assessment; Sataloff A, total or near total therapeutic effect; CEF, cyclophosphamide epirubicin 5-Fluorouracil; CAF cyclophosphamide adriamycin 5-fluorouracil; DE, docetaxel epirubicin; DC, docetaxel cisplatin; DEC, docetaxel epirubicin cisplatin; FEC, fluorouracil + epirubicin + cyclophosphamide; AT, doxorubicin + taxanes; TAC, taxanes + doxorubicin + cyclophosphamide; TC, taxanes + cyclophosphamide; Dox, doxorubicin; Cyc, cyclophosphamide; Cis, cisplatin; PþE, paclitaxel and epirubicin; NR, not reported

Basic characteristics of included studies LABC locally advanced breast cancer; IDL invasive ductal carcinoma; ILC invasive lobular carcinoma; Pro prospective; Retro retrospective; NR not reported Characteristics of included studies for neoadjuvant chemotherapy Miller-Payne grade V, showed complete disappearance of malignant cells at the site of tumor with only vascular fibroelastotic stroma seen with macrophages; TRG 1, complete regression, absence of residual tumor cells; Chevalier class 1, disappearance of all tumors on either macroscopic or microscopic assessment; Sataloff A, total or near total therapeutic effect; CEF, cyclophosphamide epirubicin 5-Fluorouracil; CAF cyclophosphamide adriamycin 5-fluorouracil; DE, docetaxel epirubicin; DC, docetaxel cisplatin; DEC, docetaxel epirubicin cisplatin; FEC, fluorouracil + epirubicin + cyclophosphamide; AT, doxorubicin + taxanes; TAC, taxanes + doxorubicin + cyclophosphamide; TC, taxanes + cyclophosphamide; Dox, doxorubicin; Cyc, cyclophosphamide; Cis, cisplatin; PþE, paclitaxel and epirubicin; NR, not reported The result of the QUADAS-2 form revealed that the included studies contained satisfying and eligible qualities. The detailed information and the distribution results of each enrolled study were displayed in Fig. 2.
Fig. 2

Methodological quality summary of 20 included studies

Methodological quality summary of 20 included studies

Performance of DWI

The sensitivity and specificity of all 20 selected studies ranged from 0.68 (95% CI, 0.43–0.87) to 1.00 (95% CI, 0.59–1.00), and from 0.38 (95% CI, 0.28–0.49) to 0.95 (95% CI, 0.90–0.98), respectively. The pooled estimate of 20 studies demonstrated a sensitivity of 0.89 (95% CI, 0.86–0.91) (Fig. 3), a specificity of 0.72 (95% CI, 0.68–0.75) (Fig. 4), and a DOR of 27.00 (95% CI, 15.60–46.73) (Fig. 5). Figure 6 presented the AUC value, which represented the overall diagnostic accuracy of DWI, was 0.9088 ± 0.0230, and the *Q index was 0.8408 ± 0.0254. The outcomes of the analyses suggested that DWI modality was provided with eligible diagnostic performance in the differentiation of NACT responders and non-responders. The publication bias was shown in Fig. 7. Confirming by the Deeks’ funnel plot asymmetry test, no significant publication bias (P = 0.51) existed in the present study.
Fig. 3

Forest plot of DWI in sensitivity to predict pCR

Fig. 4

Forest plot of DWI in specificity to predict pCR

Fig. 5

Forest plot of DOR of 20 included studies

Fig. 6

SROC to predict pCR in primary breast cancer by DWI

Fig. 7

Funnel plot of publication bias

Forest plot of DWI in sensitivity to predict pCR Forest plot of DWI in specificity to predict pCR Forest plot of DOR of 20 included studies SROC to predict pCR in primary breast cancer by DWI Funnel plot of publication bias

Heterogeneity text

The statistical results confirmed that there was heterogeneity of DWI both in sensitivity (I2 = 62.7%) and in specificity (I2 = 84.9%). The Spearman correlation coefficients’ P values (0.565, P > 0.05) disclosed the absence of threshold effect in the DWI evaluation. Single-factor meta-regression analyses were also performed to assess the non-threshold effect. Three subgroups, regarding different pCR rate, treatment duration of patients and whether the researchers were blinded to patients’ therapeutic responses to NACT and pathological findings, were analyzed. Table 3 listed the results of meta-regression analyses. The results demonstrated no statistically significant differences among each subgroup, which indicated that pCR rate, treatment duration, and study design (blinded or not) were not strongly associated with DWI accuracy.
Table 3

Results of regression meta-analysis

Pathologic complete response rateThe duration of the patientsBlind
Coefficient− 0.314− 0.3650.243
Standard error0.71530.77150.7349
P value0.66730.64270.7457
RDOR0.730.691.27
[95% CI](0.16 to 3.36)(0.13 to 3.59)(0.27 to 6.11)
Results of regression meta-analysis

Discussion

DWI, with its rapid, non-invasive, and without the use of contrast agent characteristic, has emerged as a practical mean to overcome the limitation of DCE-MRI [23, 39]. However, to our knowledge, no previous meta-analysis focused on evaluating the diagnostic performance of DWI in detecting patients’ complete response to NACT in breast cancer. Thus, we designed the current meta-analysis specific for this purpose. By combining data from 20 studies, we detected a 0.89 sensitivity and a 0.72 specificity for DWI, which indicated that DWI could be a valuable imaging method for assessing pCR to NACT in breast cancer. An approximately 0.91 AUC value, which was close to 1 (the perfect test result), also indicated an ideal diagnostic performance. The DOR of a test can serve as a single summary measure since it obtains from combining different sensitivity and specificity. It is defined as the ratio of the odds of positivity in disease relative subjects to the odds of positivity in the non-diseased [40]. The DOR value display in a wide range from 0 to infinity. A higher DOR value represents a better ability for the discrimination of the test performance. The outcome of our study has shown that the DOR estimated for DWI was 27.00 (95% CI, 15.60–46.73). This benign high-DOR value indicated that DWI could monitor pCR in NACT accurately. Although the pooled statistic of our study implied that DWI might accurately detect pCR for breast cancer to NACT, significant heterogeneity in sensitivity (2 = 62.7%) and specificity (I2 = 84.9%) were also noticed. The Spearman correlation coefficients of DWI (0.565, P > 0.05) already eliminated the threshold effect had on DWI evaluation. However, the considerable heterogeneity might be attributed to many other factors, such as variations in definition to separate responders from non-responders, variations in the duration of the study population, or differences in pathologic complete response rate or study designs. To reduce the influence induced by these diversities, we carried out several subgroups analyses concerning pCR rate, time duration of study population, and study design. Meta-regression analyses revealed no significant difference among the three subgroups. This finding implied that, although heterogeneity might exist between different studies, results across studies were still comparable with little or no differences outcomes. Abundant studies have been conducted to evaluate the efficiency of DCE-MRI in diagnosing pathologic response to NACT for patients with breast cancer. Yet, only a few has investigated the DWI diagnostic accuracy for predicting pCR to NACT. Gu et al. [11] suggested that the sensitivity and specificity of DWI were 93 and 85%, respectively. Another meta-analysis, Wu et al. [41] reported a 93% sensitivity and a 82% specificity for DWI evaluation. It seems that both studies have a slightly higher sensitivity and a much higher specificity than our research. However, the two previous analyses only included a small amount of studies which provided DWI data. Gu et al. enrolled eight studies, and Wu et al. had six. Our study analyzed up to 20 groups of DWI data, and this might be the reason causing discrepancy in our result. Interestingly, we can observe in all three studies that the sensitivity of DWI is higher than the specificity. This finding might further prove the hypothesis that DWI could accurately assess pCR in sensitivity. However, it might lack specificity. Generally, by predicting the outcome and identifying the pCR to NACT treatment, breast cancer patients can avoid inappropriate chemotherapy at early stage as well as additional toxic therapies, and hold a better chance to achieve pCR [42, 43]. Therefore, some researchers argue that it is crucial to find a specific time for DWI evaluation. However, the previous studies and our analysis all failed to find an exact time to perform DWI. The timing of DWI assessment in our research was varied from study to study. Many studies conducted DWI at several time points. Five studies performed DWI after 1 cycle of therapy, three conducted after 2 cycles, and four studies assessed after 3 cycles. The available data were limited and hampered us to perform subgroup analysis. Nevertheless, a pattern can still be observed from the included studies. It seems that the first 3 cycles might be the preferable timing for DWI assessment. This hypothesis needs further approval. Some limitations should be taken into account in our analysis. First, a majority of the included studies contained a relatively small patients’ population which might weaken the statistical power of the study and might bring about inconclusive and imprecise results. Although quality assessment and publication bias test confirmed that the included studies were eligible, the effect brought by different sample size still could not be neglected. Second, patients with different breast cancer subtypes would be assigned with different treatment regimens which might eventually lead to different pathological responses [24, 25, 33]. Bufi et al. remarked that DWI might achieve a better diagnostic performance in luminal and hybrid tumor subtypes [24]. Another study by Bufi et al. reported that pretreatment ADC was capable of detecting pCR in Triple negative and HER2+ tumors [25]. Richard et al. found that luminal A and B subtypes had a lower pretreatment ADC than triple-negative tumors which indicated a superior performance of DWI in the prediction of pCR to NACT in triple-negative tumors [33]. Thus, subgroup analysis based on tumor phenotypes is desirable. However, the limited information, which only three studies had provided data of breast cancer subtypes, prevented us to conduct subgroup analysis on this aspect. Moreover, the definition of pCR could be a reason affecting the diagnostic accuracy test. Since too many various pCR definitions were applied in the included studies, such as Miller-Payne grading system, Mandard’s TRG criteria, Japanese Breast Cancer Society criteria, Chevalier-Sataloff classifications and classification by user-defined, subgroup comparison could not be performed in our study. Yet, although subgroups and threshold effect evaluation has diminished the influence of heterogeneity, the effect of heterogeneity still cannot be eliminated completely. Several variables, regarding treatment regiments of NACT, timing of pCR evaluation, standards and pattern of DWI measurement, and the optimal cut-off values of diagnosis, should be taken into consideration. However, the information retrieved from the included studies were limited and inconsistent regarding the above factors, making it impossible to conduct subgroup analyses to eliminate their effect.

Conclusion

Despite some limitations, the findings of our study indicate that DWI modality holds a relatively high sensitivity and specificity for the evaluation and prediction of pCR of breast cancer to NACT. The result of our analysis suggests that the application of DWI in combination with other imaging modality may yield greater precision and accuracy in assessing the pCR after NACT.
  43 in total

1.  The diagnostic odds ratio: a single indicator of test performance.

Authors:  Afina S Glas; Jeroen G Lijmer; Martin H Prins; Gouke J Bonsel; Patrick M M Bossuyt
Journal:  J Clin Epidemiol       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 6.437

2.  Meta-analysis of MR imaging in the diagnosis of breast lesions.

Authors:  Nicky H G M Peters; Inne H M Borel Rinkes; Nicolaas P A Zuithoff; Willem P T M Mali; Karel G M Moons; Petra H M Peeters
Journal:  Radiology       Date:  2007-11-16       Impact factor: 11.105

3.  Clinically relevant modeling of tumor growth and treatment response.

Authors:  Thomas E Yankeelov; Nkiruka Atuegwu; David Hormuth; Jared A Weis; Stephanie L Barnes; Michael I Miga; Erin C Rericha; Vito Quaranta
Journal:  Sci Transl Med       Date:  2013-05-29       Impact factor: 17.956

4.  Diffusion-weighted MRI in pretreatment prediction of response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy in patients with breast cancer.

Authors:  Raphael Richard; Isabelle Thomassin; Marion Chapellier; Aurélie Scemama; Patricia de Cremoux; Mariana Varna; Sylvie Giacchetti; Marc Espié; Eric de Kerviler; Cedric de Bazelaire
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2013-05-08       Impact factor: 5.315

5.  Machine learning for predicting the response of breast cancer to neoadjuvant chemotherapy.

Authors:  Subramani Mani; Yukun Chen; Xia Li; Lori Arlinghaus; A Bapsi Chakravarthy; Vandana Abramson; Sandeep R Bhave; Mia A Levy; Hua Xu; Thomas E Yankeelov
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2013-04-24       Impact factor: 4.497

6.  Role of the Apparent Diffusion Coefficient in the Prediction of Response to Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy in Patients With Locally Advanced Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Enida Bufi; Paolo Belli; Melania Costantini; Antonio Cipriani; Marialuisa Di Matteo; Angelo Bonatesta; Gianluca Franceschini; Daniela Terribile; Antonino Mulé; Luigia Nardone; Lorenzo Bonomo
Journal:  Clin Breast Cancer       Date:  2015-02-21       Impact factor: 3.225

Review 7.  Role of Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Detection of Pathologic Complete Remission in Breast Cancer Patients Treated With Neoadjuvant Chemotherapy: A Meta-analysis.

Authors:  Yan-Lin Gu; Si-Meng Pan; Jie Ren; Zhi-Xue Yang; Guo-Qin Jiang
Journal:  Clin Breast Cancer       Date:  2017-01-11       Impact factor: 3.225

8.  The use of alternate, non-cross-resistant adjuvant chemotherapy on the basis of pathologic response to a neoadjuvant doxorubicin-based regimen in women with operable breast cancer: long-term results from a prospective randomized trial.

Authors:  Eva Thomas; Frankie A Holmes; Terry L Smith; Aman U Buzdar; Debra K Frye; Giuseppe Fraschini; S Eva Singletary; Richard L Theriault; Marsha D McNeese; Frederick Ames; Ronald Walters; Gabriel N Hortobagyi
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2004-06-15       Impact factor: 44.544

Review 9.  Response to therapy in breast cancer.

Authors:  Norbert Avril; Stefanie Sassen; Rebecca Roylance
Journal:  J Nucl Med       Date:  2009-04-20       Impact factor: 10.057

10.  QUADAS-2: a revised tool for the quality assessment of diagnostic accuracy studies.

Authors:  Penny F Whiting; Anne W S Rutjes; Marie E Westwood; Susan Mallett; Jonathan J Deeks; Johannes B Reitsma; Mariska M G Leeflang; Jonathan A C Sterne; Patrick M M Bossuyt
Journal:  Ann Intern Med       Date:  2011-10-18       Impact factor: 25.391

View more
  7 in total

1.  The diagnostic performance of CESM and CE-MRI in evaluating the pathological response to neoadjuvant therapy in breast cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Sudan Tang; Chunhong Xiang; Quan Yang
Journal:  Br J Radiol       Date:  2020-07-02       Impact factor: 3.039

2.  Predictive Value of Early Response to Chemoradiotherapy in Advanced Esophageal Squamous Cell Carcinoma by Diffusion-Weighted MR Imaging.

Authors:  Wei Chen; Ya-Ting Wang; Lili Guo; Zhaohuan Zhu; Hai-Fei Zhou; Genji Bai
Journal:  Technol Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2020 Jan-Dec

3.  Early prediction of neoadjuvant chemotherapy response for advanced breast cancer using PET/MRI image deep learning.

Authors:  Joon Ho Choi; Hyun-Ah Kim; Wook Kim; Ilhan Lim; Inki Lee; Byung Hyun Byun; Woo Chul Noh; Min-Ki Seong; Seung-Sook Lee; Byung Il Kim; Chang Woon Choi; Sang Moo Lim; Sang-Keun Woo
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-12-03       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 4.  Factors affecting the value of diffusion-weighted imaging for identifying breast cancer patients with pathological complete response on neoadjuvant systemic therapy: a systematic review.

Authors:  Kay J J van der Hoogt; Robert J Schipper; Gonneke A Winter-Warnars; Leon C Ter Beek; Claudette E Loo; Ritse M Mann; Regina G H Beets-Tan
Journal:  Insights Imaging       Date:  2021-12-18

Review 5.  A Canadian national guideline on the neoadjuvant treatment of invasive breast cancer, including patient assessment, systemic therapy, and local management principles.

Authors:  Sonal Gandhi; Muriel Brackstone; Nicole J Look Hong; Debjani Grenier; Elysia Donovan; Fang-I Lu; Mia Skarpathiotakis; Justin Lee; Jean-Francois Boileau; Francisco Perera; Christine Simmons; Anil A Joy; William T Tran
Journal:  Breast Cancer Res Treat       Date:  2022-02-28       Impact factor: 4.872

Review 6.  Diffusion Breast MRI: Current Standard and Emerging Techniques.

Authors:  Ashley M Mendez; Lauren K Fang; Claire H Meriwether; Summer J Batasin; Stéphane Loubrie; Ana E Rodríguez-Soto; Rebecca A Rakow-Penner
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-07-08       Impact factor: 5.738

Review 7.  Diffusion-weighted imaging of the breast: current status as an imaging biomarker and future role.

Authors:  Julia Camps-Herrero
Journal:  BJR Open       Date:  2019-03-08
  7 in total

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