| Literature DB >> 34215324 |
Ching-Chung Ko1,2, Lee-Ren Yeh3, Yu-Ting Kuo1,4, Jeon-Hor Chen5,6.
Abstract
Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (RECIST) is the gold standard for assessment of treatment response in solid tumors. Morphologic change of tumor size evaluated by RECIST is often correlated with survival length and has been considered as a surrogate endpoint of therapeutic efficacy. However, the detection of morphologic change alone may not be sufficient for assessing response to new anti-cancer medication in all solid tumors. During the past fifteen years, several molecular-targeted therapies and immunotherapies have emerged in cancer treatment which work by disrupting signaling pathways and inhibited cell growth. Tumor necrosis or lack of tumor progression is associated with a good therapeutic response even in the absence of tumor shrinkage. Therefore, the use of unmodified RECIST criteria to estimate morphological changes of tumor alone may not be sufficient to estimate tumor response for these new anti-cancer drugs. Several studies have reported the low reliability of RECIST in evaluating treatment response in different tumors such as hepatocellular carcinoma, lung cancer, prostate cancer, brain glioma, bone metastasis, and lymphoma. There is an increased need for new medical imaging biomarkers, considering the changes in tumor viability, metabolic activity, and attenuation, which are related to early tumor response. Promising imaging techniques, beyond RECIST, include dynamic contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), diffusion-weight imaging (DWI), magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), and 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET). This review outlines the current RECIST with their limitations and the new emerging concepts of imaging biomarkers in oncology.Entities:
Keywords: Imaging biomarker; RECIST; Tumor response
Year: 2021 PMID: 34215324 PMCID: PMC8252278 DOI: 10.1186/s40364-021-00306-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomark Res ISSN: 2050-7771
Comparison between WHO, RECIST, and RECIST 1.1 Criteria
| WHO | RECIST | RECIST 1.1 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lesion measurement | |||
| Imaging modalities | N/A | Chest X-ray, CT, and MRI | Chest X-ray, CT, MRI, and 18 F-FDG PET |
| Limitation of measurable lesions | N/A | • 10 mm on spiral CT • 20 mm on non-spiral CT or MRI • Chest X-ray: if clearly defined • Clinical: 20 mm | • 10 mm on CT/MRI (slice thickness ≤ 5 mm), or 2 x slice thickness (if thickness > 5 mm ) • Chest X-ray: 20 mm • Clinical: 10 mm (must be measurable with calipers) •18 F-FDG PET: included only in the detection of new lesions |
| Lymph node | Unspecified | Unspecified | CT: short axis • ≥ 15 mm is measurable, target lesion • 10–14 mm is non-measurable, non-target lesion • < 10 mm is normal |
| Method of measurement | Cross-product of the longest diameter and the longest perpendicular diameter | Longest diameter in the axial plane | Longest diameter in the axial plane |
| Numbers of lesions measured | N/A | up to 10 lesions (≤ 5 in any one organ) | up to 5 lesions (≤ 2 in any one organ) |
| Response evaluation | |||
| Complete Response (CR) | Disappearance of all lesions | Disappearance of all lesions | Disappearance of all lesions and pathologic lymph nodes |
| Partial Response (PR) | ≥ 50 % decrease in the sum of the area | ≥ 30 % decrease in the sum of the longest diameter | ≥ 30 % decrease in the sum of the longest diameter |
| Stable Disease (SD) | Neither PR nor PD | Neither PR nor PD | Neither PR nor PD |
| Progressive Disease (PD) | ≥ 25 % increase in the sum of the area | ≥ 20 % increase in the sum of longest diameters, or new lesions | ≥ 20 % increase in the sum of longest diameters with an absolute increase of ≥ 5 mm, or new lesions |
CT computed tomography, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, N/A not applicable, PET positron emission tomography, RECIST Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumor, WHO World Health Organization
Summary of major tumor response assessment criteria other than RECIST
| Author / Year | Criteria | Brief description |
|---|---|---|
| Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) | ||
| Lencioni, R. et al. (2010) [ | modified RECIST (mRECIST) | • To resolve limitations of anatomic tumor response metrics when applied RECIST 1.1 to molecular-targeted therapies or locoregional therapies in HCC. • Reassessment of progression that could be misinterpreted in RECIST 1.1 due to the natural progression of chronic liver disease (ascites, enlargement of lymph nodes, etc.). • Only well-delineated, arterially enhancing lesions can be selected as target lesions. • Number of target lesions: up to 5 lesions (≤ 2 in any one organ). • Short axis of porta hepatis lymph nodes ≥ 20 mm or other lymph nodes ≥ 15 mm are considered as malignant. |
| Brain tumor | ||
| Macdonald, D.R. et al. (1990) [ | McDonald | • Using contrast-enhanced CT and MRI scans of the head. • Response assessment is based on changes in tumor size (the product of the maximal cross-sectional enhancing diameters). • Considering the use of corticosteroids and changes in the neurologic status of the patient. |
| Wen, P.Y. et al. (2010) [ | RANO | • Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology (RANO) criteria. • An update to the McDonald Criteria which also takes into consideration of non-enhancing tumor components, and lesions on the T1/T2-weighted and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI sequences. • Definition of measurability. • Number of target lesions: up to 5 lesions. • Pseudo-progression considered. |
| Bone metastasis | ||
| Hamaoka, T. et al. (2004) [ | MDA | • MD Anderson (MDA) Bone Response Criteria. • An approach for diagnosis and assessment of bone metastasis. • Quantitative and qualitative assessments of the behavior of bone metastases based on x-ray, CT, and MRI. |
| Lymphoma | ||
| Cheson, B.D., et al. (2007) [ | Revised Cheson | • Definition of standardized response criteria for Hodgkin’s and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma using 18 F-FDG PET, immunohistochemistry, and flow cytometry. |
| Cheson, B.D., et al. (2014) [ | Lugano | • Represent a set of revised recommendations regarding the use of the Cheson criteria and Deauville five-point scale, and formally incorporated 18 F-FDG PET into standard staging and response evaluation for FDG-avid lymphomas. |
| Gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) | ||
| Choi, H. et al. (2007) [ | Choi | • CT criteria for evaluation of response to imatinib therapy in gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST). • Combination of tumor size and tumor attenuation on CT (a 10 % decrease in tumor size or a more than 15 % decrease in tumor attenuation at 2 months of treatment) were used. • Defining progressive disease by (1) appearance of new lesions, (2) appearance or increase in size of intratumoral nodules, or (3) tumor size increase by more than 20 % without post-treatment hypodense change. |
| 18 F-FDG PET | ||
| Young, H. et al. (1999) [ | EORTC PET response | • European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) PET response. • Proposed a common method of assessing tumor 18 F-FDG uptake and reporting of response data. |
| Wahl, R.L. et al. (2009) [ | PERCIST | • PET Response Criteria in Solid Tumors (PERCIST). • Qualitative and quantitative approaches to metabolic tumor response assessment with 18 F-FDG PET. |
| Goldfarb, L. et al. (2019) [ | iPERCIST | • Immune PET Response Criteria in Solid Tumors (iPERCIST). • Monitoring anti-programmed cell death 1 (PD-1)-based immunotherapy in non-small cell lung cancer with 18 F-FDG PET. |
| Immunotherapy | ||
| Wolchok, J.D. et al. (2009) [ | irRC | • The immune-related Response Criteria (irRC) • Bidimensional (the product of the maximal cross-sectional diameters). • Selection of 5 lesions (≥ 5 × 5 mm) per organ (up to 10 visceral and 5 cutaneous ones). • New lesions are incorporated into the total tumor burden, do not immediately mean progressive disease (PD). |
| Nishino, M. et al. (2013) [ | irRECIST | • The immune-related Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (irRECIST) criteria. • Unidimensional (longest diameter). • Maximum 5 (2 per organ) lesions (≥ 10 mm in diameter; ≥15 mm for nodal lesions). • New lesions are incorporated in the total measured tumor burden, do not immediately mean PD. |
| Seymour, L. et al. (2017) [ | iRECIST | • The immune Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (iRECIST) criteria. • Unidimensional (longest diameter). • Maximum 5 (2 per organ) lesions (≥ 10 mm in diameter; ≥15 mm for nodal lesions). • New lesions are recorded separately, not included in the sum of lesions for target lesions identified at baseline. • Defining unconfirmed progressive disease (iUPD) and confirmed progressive disease (iCPD). • iCPD: if additional new lesions appear or an increase in size of new lesions (≥ 5 mm for sum of new target lesion or any increase in new non-target lesion) on next cross-sectional imaging after iUPD. |
Assessment of Treatment Response in RECIST 1.1 Criteria
| Overall Response | Target Lesions | Non-Target lesions | New lesions |
|---|---|---|---|
| CR | CR | CR | No |
| PR | CR | Non-CR or non-PD | No |
| PR | CR | Not evaluated | No |
| PR | PR | Non-PD or not all evaluated | No |
| SD | SD | Non-PD or not all evaluated | No |
| NE | Not all evaluated | Non-PD | No |
| PD | PD | Any | Yes or No |
| PD | Any | PD | Yes or No |
| PD | Any | Any | Yes |
CR complete response, NE not suitable to evaluation, PD progressive disease, PR partial response, SD stable disease
Fig. 1Application of modified Response Evaluation Criteria in Solid Tumors (mRECIST) for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). A Measurement of the longest overall target tumor diameter (41 mm) according to conventional RECIST. B Measurement of the longest viable tumor diameter (30 mm) based on tumor enhancement area on arterial-phase CT imaging according to mRECIST for HCC
Response Assessment in Neuro-Oncology (RANO) Criteria
| Criterion | CR | PR | SD | PD |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| T1WI with CE | None | ≥ 50 %↓ | ˂ 50 %↓but ˂ 25 %↑ | ≥ 25 %↑a |
| T2WI/FLAIR | Stable or ↓ | Stable or ↓ | Stable or ↓ | ↑a |
| New lesion | None | None | None | Presenta |
| Corticosteroid | None | Stable or ↓ | Stable or ↓ | N/Ab |
| Clinical Status | Stable or ↑ | Stable or ↑ | Stable or ↑ | ↓a |
| Response Requirement | All | All | All | Anya |
CE contrast enhancement, CR complete response, FLAIR fluid attenuated inversion recovery, PD progressive disease, PR partial response, SD stable disease, T1WI T1-weighted MR imaging, T2WI T2-weighted MR imaging
aProgression occurs when any this criterion is present
bN/A not applicable
Fig. 2Bone density changes suggest tumor response in bone metastases. A 42-year-old man was diagnosed with lung adenocarcinoma and bone metastases. A Pretreatment axial CT scan in the bone window shows two osteolytic metastases (both lesions with diameters of 10 mm) (white arrows) in thoracic vertebrae. B, C The osseous lesions have not significantly changed in the sum of longest diameters according to RECIST 1.1 but show osteosclerotic reaction (white arrows) in 6 months (B) and 10 months (C) after targeted therapy with afatinib, an epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) - tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI), representing good response. D, E Skeletal scintigraphy shows significantly decreased uptake of radiotracer after comparison between pretreatment (D) and posttreatment (E) images, which confirmed good therapeutic response
Fig. 3Measurement of tumor thickness for tumor burden assessment in malignant pleural mesothelioma (MPM) according to modified RECIST. The tumor thickness is measured perpendicularly to the chest wall (arrows) or mediastinum, not measuring the tumor longest diameter. The sum of six measured values from two different positions on three different levels is used as modified RECIST in MPM
Revised Cheson Criteria for Malignant Lymphoma
| Response | Definition | Nodal masses | Spleen, Liver | Bone marrow |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CR | Disappearance of all evidence of disease | • FDG-avid or PET positive prior to therapy; mass of any size permitted if PET negative • Variably FDG-avid or PET negative; regression to normal size on CT | Not palpable, nodules disappeared | Infiltrate cleared on repeat biopsy; if indeterminate by morphology, immunohistochemistry should be negative |
| PR | Regression of measurable disease and no new sites | ≥ 50 % decrease in SPD of up to 6 largest dominant masses; no increase in size of other nodes; • FDG-avid or PET positive prior to therapy; one or more PET positive at previously involved site • Variably FDG-avid or PET negative; regression on CT | ≥ 50 % decrease in SPD of nodules (for single nodule in greatest transverse diameter); no increase in size of liver or spleen | Irrelevant if positive prior to therapy; cell type should be specified |
| PD or relapsed disease | Any new lesion or increase by ≥ 50 % of previously involved sites from nadir | Appearance of a new lesion(s) > 1.5 cm in any axis, ≥ 50 % increase in SPD of more than one node, or ≥ 50 % increase in longest diameter of a previously identified node > 1 cm in short axis; lesions PET positive if FDG-avid lymphoma or PET positive before therapy | > 50 % increase from nadir in the SPD of any previous lesions | New or recurrent involvement |
| SD | Not meet above criteria | • FDG-avid or PET positive prior to therapy; PET positive at prior sites of disease and no new sites on CT or PET • Variably FDG-avid or PET negative; no change in size of previous lesions on CT |
CR complete remission, FDG fluorodeoxyglucose, PD progressive disease, PET positron emission tomography, PR partial remission, SD stable disease, SPD sum of the product of the diameters
Fig. 4Tumor necrosis indicates early good response in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) receiving targeted therapy. A 53-year-old man diagnosed with NSCLC (positive EGFR exon 20 insertion mutations) and received afatinib therapy. A Pretreatment contrast-enhanced (CE) axial CT scan shows an enhancing tumor (arrow), with diameter of 64 mm. B, C Pseudo-progression with increased tumor size (arrow) was observed in 3 months (B) (67 mm in tumor diameter) and 8 months (C) (74 mm in tumor diameter) after targeted therapy. Simultaneously, the progression of focal tumor necrosis (arrowheads in figure B) to diffuse tumor necrosis (C) was also observed. D Shrinkage of tumor mass (50 mm in diameter) was observed 15 months after therapy
Fig. 5Illustration depicting the target lesion measurement in NSCLC by RECIST and Lee’s criteria. According to RECIST criteria, the size of the target lesion in lung cancer is measured by including both solid and ground-glass opacity (GGO) components (a). According to Lee’s criteria, the size of the target lesion is measured by solid component alone on soft tissue window imaging (b). If the target lesion has intratumoral cavitation, the size of the target lesion is measured by including only the soft-tissue component and excluding the air component (subtraction of cavity diameter from the longest diameter of tumor mass) (b - c)
Fig. 6Comparison between RECIST and Lee’s criteria in NSCLC. A 51-year-old man was diagnosed with NSCLC. A Pretreatment CE axial CT scan in lung window shows a 92-mm-sized tumor, including both solid and GGO components (black arrows). B After targeted therapy with afatinib, posttreatment CE CT scan shows no significant decrease in tumor size (84 mm in diameter, 9 % reduction) (black arrows), suggesting stable disease according to RECIST 1.1. C According to Lee’s criteria, the size of the target lesion (white arrows) is measured on pretreatment CE axial CT by solid component alone (79 mm in diameter) on soft tissue window imaging. D After targeted therapy, the size of the target lesion is measured by including only soft-tissue tumor (white arrows) (77 mm in diameter) and excluding necrotic air cavitation (asterisk) (49 mm in diameter), thus the tumor size is 28mm (65 % reduction), suggesting good tumor response according to Lee’s criteria
Positron Emission Tomography Response Criteria in Solid Tumors (PERCIST)
| Response | Criteria |
|---|---|
| CR | • Disappearance of all metabolically active tumor |
| PR | • > 30 % decrease in SUL peak (minimum 0.8 unit decrease) in lesion with greatest uptake (not necessarily the same lesion) |
| PD | • > 30 % increase in SUL peak (minimum 0.8 unit increase) • > 75 % increase in total lesion glycolysis • New lesions |
| SD | • Does not meet above criteria |
CR complete metabolic response, PD progressive metabolic disease, PR partial metabolic response, SD stable metabolic disease, SUL standardized uptake value using lean body mass
Choi Criteria
| Response | Criteria |
|---|---|
| CR | • Disappearance of all lesions • No new lesions |
| PR | • A decrease in tumor size ≥ 10 % or a decreased in tumor attenuation (Hounsfield unit) ≥ 15 % on CT • No new lesions • No obvious progression of non-measurable disease |
| PD | • An increase in tumor size ≥ 10 % and does not meet criteria of PR by tumor attenuation on CT • New lesions • New intratumoral nodules or increase in size of the existing intratumoral nodules |
| SD | • Does not meet criteria of CR, PR, or PD • No symptomatic deterioration resulted from tumor progression |
CR complete response, PD progressive disease, PR partial response, SD stable disease
Fig. 7Application of Choi criteria in the gastrointestinal stromal tumor (GIST) after targeted therapy with imatinib. A 49-year-old man was diagnosed with GIST. A Pretreatment CE axial CT scan shows an 88-mm-sized enhancing tumor (arrow) arising from the stomach. The measured CT number on the region of interest (ROI) is 36.1 Hounsfield units (HU). B After targeted therapy with imatinib, posttreatment CE CT scan shows no significantly decreased in tumor size (87 mm in diameter) (arrow) but markedly decreased attenuation (22.6 HU, 37 % reduction), suggesting tumor response according to Choi criteria
Fig. 8MRI-dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) kinetic curve can be used to predict chemotherapy response. A - C The upper panel shows a woman with breast cancer in the right breast. The tumor responded very well to chemotherapy. After one cycle of Adriamycin and Cyclophosphamide (AC), and 4 cycles of AC or taxane, the tumor size was remarkably reduced (white arrows). D Note the change of the DCE kinetic curves, acquired from the pretreatment MRI (blue) and after 1 cycle of AC (red), from washout pattern to more flattened pattern, indicating the malignant cells were being eliminated. E - G The lower panel is a woman of non-responder. The breast cancer in the left breast was not reduced in size following chemotherapy (red arrows). H Note the DCE kinetic curve acquired from MRI after 1 cycle of AC (red), became more apparently a washout pattern compared with the pre-treatment curve (blue)
Fig. 9Low apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) value on diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) can predict worse therapeutic response in brain glioblastoma. A Pretreatment CE axial T1-weighted imaging (T1WI) shows a 40-mm-sized enhancing glioblastoma (arrow) with the cystic component in the left temporal lobe. B The DWI shows hyperintensity in the solid part of the tumor (arrow), indicating a diffusion restriction phenomenon. C The measured ADC value (b = 1000 s/mm2) on ROI is 0.72 × 10− 3 mm2/sec. (D) Rapid tumor recurrence (tumor diameter of 54 mm) (curved arrow) was observed 3 months after surgical resection. E Pretreatment CE axial T1WI shows another 65-mm-sized enhancing glioblastoma (open arrow) with a cystic component in the left frontal lobe. F DWI shows isointensity (no diffusion restriction) in the solid part of the tumor (open arrow). G The measured ADC value on ROI is 1.42 × 10− 3 mm2/sec. (H) No tumor recurrence was observed 72 months after surgical resection
Fig. 10Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) can early predict chemotherapy response. A A woman with 34 mm breast cancer in the left breast (white arrow). B The pretreatment MRS shows a choline peak of 2.33 mmol/kg. C After one cycle of Adriamycin and Cyclophosphamide, the tumor was 26 mm (white arrow), showing a 24 % reduction in size. According to the RECIST 1.1, this is a non-responder. D However, posttreatment MRS shows much more sensitive evidence of tumor response with a 51 % reduction of total choline level (from 2.33 mmol/kg to 1.15 mmol/kg) (black arrow)
Fig. 1118 F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) can predict early response in targeted therapy. A 53-year-old man was diagnosed with Hodgkin lymphoma at the left parotid gland. A Pretreatment CE axial CT imaging shows a 16 mm tumor mass at the left parotid gland (white arrow). B The SUVmax value of 3.0 in the target lesion (open arrow) was detected on a pretreatment PET-CT scan. C After five cycles of brentuximab vedotin, a tumor size of 13.5 mm (white arrow) was observed, showing a 16 % reduction in size. According to the RECIST 1.1, this is a non-responder. D However, posttreatment PET-CT scan shows good tumor response with 50 % reduction of SUVmax value (from 3.0 to 1.5) (open arrow)