Quantitative Analysis of Liver Disease Using MRI-Based Radiomic Features of the Liver and Spleen

Jordan Sack, Jennifer Nitsch, Hans Meine, Ron Kikinis, Michael Halle, Anna Rutherford

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background: Radiomics extracts quantitative image features to identify biomarkers for characterizing disease. Our aim was to characterize the ability of radiomic features extracted from magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the liver and spleen to detect cirrhosis by comparing features from patients with cirrhosis to those without cirrhosis. Methods: This retrospective study compared MR-derived radiomic features between patients with cirrhosis undergoing hepatocellular carcinoma screening and patients without cirrhosis undergoing intraductal papillary mucinous neoplasm surveillance between 2015 and 2018 using the same imaging protocol. Secondary analyses stratified the cirrhosis cohort by liver disease severity using clinical compensation/decompensation and Model for End-Stage Liver Disease (MELD). Results: Of 167 patients, 90 had cirrhosis with 68.9% compensated and median MELD 8. Combined liver and spleen radiomic features generated an AUC 0.94 for detecting cirrhosis, with shape and texture components contributing more than size. Discrimination of cirrhosis remained high after stratification by liver disease severity. Conclusions: MR-based liver and spleen radiomic features had high accuracy in identifying cirrhosis, after stratification by clinical compensation/decompensation and MELD. Shape and texture features performed better than size features. These findings will inform radiomic-based applications for cirrhosis diagnosis and severity.

Original languageEnglish
Article number277
JournalJournal of Imaging
Volume8
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • MRI
  • cirrhosis
  • diagnosis
  • radiomics
  • severity
  • spleen

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