| Literature DB >> 30837617 |
Peijin Han1, Pranav Lakshminarayanan2, Wei Jiang3, Ilya Shpitser4, Xuan Hui5, Sang Ho Lee2, Zhi Cheng2, Yue Guo6, Russell H Taylor4, Sauleh A Siddiqui3, Michael Bowers2, Khadija Sheikh2, Ana Kiess2, Brandi R Page2, Junghoon Lee2, Harry Quon2, Todd R McNutt2.
Abstract
Xerostomia is a common consequence of radiotherapy in head and neck cancer. The objective was to compare the regional radiation dose distribution in patients that developed xerostomia within 6 months of radiotherapy and those recovered from xerostomia within 18 months post-radiotherapy. We developed a feature generation pipeline to extract dose volume histogram features from geometrically defined ipsilateral/contralateral parotid glands, submandibular glands, and oral cavity surrogates for each patient. Permutation tests with multiple comparisons were performed to assess the dose difference between injury vs. non-injury and recovery vs. non-recovery. Ridge logistic regression models were applied to predict injury and recovery using clinical features along with dose features (D10-D90) of the subvolumes extracted from oral cavity and salivary gland contours + 3 mm peripheral shell. Model performances were assessed by the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) using nested cross-validation. We found that different regional dose/volume metrics patterns exist for injury vs. recovery. Compared to injury, recovery has increased importance to the subvolumes receiving lower dose. Within the subvolumes, injury tends to have increased importance towards D10 from D90. This suggests that different threshold for xerostomia injury and recovery. Injury is induced by the subvolumes receiving higher dose, and the ability to recover can be preserved by further reducing the dose to subvolumes receiving lower dose.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30837617 PMCID: PMC6401158 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-40228-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic of contour segmentation. Segmentation of parotid gland (PG) and submandibular gland (SMG) are shown in coronal view (a) and transverse view (b). A shell of 3 mm expansion of parotid gland was created. M: medial; A: anterior; P: posterior. Figure 2(c) shows the contours of bilateral PG (i), SMG (ii) and OC (iii: transverse view and iv: sagittal view) in image set, delineated in white.
Figure 2Flowchart of patient selection, with exclusion criteria.
Patients Characteristics by Xerostomia Injury and Recovery.
| Type of Patients | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| No xerostomia (i: N = 82) | Injury and Recovery (ii: N = 135) | Injury but No recovery (iii: N = 41) | |
|
| 26 (31.7) | 35 (25.9) | 11 (26.8) |
|
| |||
| Caucasian | 61 (75) | 109 (78) | 36 (83) |
| African American | 19 (23) | 23 (17) | 4 (10) |
| Other | 2 (2) | 3 (2) | 1 (2) |
|
| |||
| Female | 24 (29) | 21 (16) | 11 (27) |
| Male | 58 (71) | 114 (84) | 30 (73) |
|
| |||
| Hypopharynx | 2 (2) | 2 (1) | 2 (5) |
| Larynx | 15 (18) | 20 (15) | 0 (0) |
| Nasopharynx | 3 (4) | 7 (5) | 0 (0) |
| Oral Cavity | 11 (13) | 43 (32) | 12 (29) |
| Oropharynx | 27 (33) | 51 (38) | 22 (54) |
| Others | 24 (29) | 12 (9) | 5 (12) |
|
| |||
| 0 and 1 | 25 (30) | 38 (28) | 5 (12) |
| 2 and above | 43 (52) | 88 (65) | 30 (73) |
| missing | 14 (17) | 9 (7) | 6 (14) |
|
| |||
| 0 | 31 (38) | 36 (27) | 8 (20) |
| 1 and 2 | 37 (45) | 88 (65) | 26 (63) |
| missing | 14 (17) | 11 (8) | 7 (17) |
| M0 | 63 (77) | 121 (90) | 33 (80) |
| M1 | 1 (1) | 2 (1) | 3 (7) |
| missing | 18 (22) | 12 (9) | 5 (12) |
| Yes | 49 (60) | 99 (73) | 27 (66) |
| No | 33 (40) | 36 (27) | 14 (34) |
|
| |||
| iPG | 57.9 ± 18.6 | 60.4 ± 18.6 | 53.6 ± 18.7 |
| cPG | 58.6 ± 17.8 | 60.7 ± 18.6 | 54.6 ± 17.5 |
| iSMG | 19.9 ± 7.2 | 21.3 ± 11.2 | 18.7 ± 5.4 |
| cSMG | 21.0 ± 6.1 | 21.5 ± 11.3 | 18.9 ± 5.2 |
| iOC | 178.1 ± 42.7 | 180.3 ± 40.01 | 177.1 ± 38.9 |
| cOC | 176.6 ± 41.7 | 178.9 ± 40.1 | 177.2 ± 40.0 |
*Categorical variables were displayed as count and percentage.
**American Joint Committee on Cancer (AJCC) staging 7.0th edition. For T stage, 0 includes T0 and Tis; 4 includes T4a and T4b. For N stage, 2 includes N2a, N2b and N2c.
***Continuous variables were displayed as mean ± SD. Volume includes contours +3 mm shell.
Figure 3The prevalence plot for CTCAE xerostomia grade ≥2 during follow-up. FU: follow-up.
Figure 4Dose distribution patterns for patients with (i) no xerostomia, (ii) injury followed by recovery, and (iii) injury but no recovery: (a) mean dose features (range 0–7900 cGy), (b) coefficient of variation for the following subvolumes: cOC, iOC, cPG, iPG, cSMG and iSMG. The feature importance resulting from the prediction models is shown for the (c) injury model (darker red indicates that an increase of dose is more influential to injury risk) and (e) recovery model (darker blue indicates a decrease of dose is more influential for improving the recovery chance, whereas red indicates an increase of dose is influential for improving the recovery chance). The black bars indicate significant differences (p < 0.05) for features between (d) injury (ii and iii) and no xerostomia (i), and (f) injury followed by recovery (ii) and non-recovery groups (iii). The relative importance (normalized to [−100, 100]) is shown in (g), and radiation dose range is shown in (h). Both PGs are segmented into the superior, middle and inferior portion, which are further segmented to medial, anterior and posterior sectors.
Nested Cross-Validation AUC for Xerostomia Injury and Recovery.
| Model | AUC ± SD | Senstivity ± SD | Specificity ± SD |
|---|---|---|---|
| Injury | 0.78 ± 0.0009 | 0.77 ± 0.003 | 0.74 ± 0.008 |
| Recovery | 0.70 ± 0.002 | 0.71 ± 0.02 | 0.67 ± 0.02 |