Real-time quantitative assessment of accuracy and precision of blood volume derived from dce-mri in individual patients during a clinical trial

9Citations
Citations of this article
24Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Accuracy and precision of quantitative imaging (QI) metrics should be assessed in real time in each patient during a clinical trial to support QI-based decision-making. We developed a framework for real-time quantitative assessment of QI metrics and evaluated accuracy and precision of dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE)-magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)– derived blood volume (BV) in a clinical trial for head and neck cancers. Patients underwent DCE-MRI before and after 2 weeks of radiation therapy (2wkRT). A mean as a reference value and a repeatability coefficient (RC) of BV values established from n patients in cerebellum volumes of interest (VOIs), which were normal and affected little by therapy, served as accuracy and precision measurements. The BV maps of a new patient were called accurate and precise if the values in cerebellum VOIs and the difference between the 2 scans agreed with the respective mean and RC with 95% confidence. The new data could be used to update reference values. Otherwise, the data were flagged for further evaluation before use in the trial. BV maps from 62 patients enrolled on the trial were evaluated. Mean BV values were 2.21 (0.14) mL/100 g pre-RT and 2.22 (0.17) mL/100 g at 2wkRT; relative RC was 15.9%. The BV maps from 3 patients were identified to be inaccurate and imprecise before use in the clinical trial. Our framework of real-time quantitative assessment of QI metrics during a clinical trial can be translated to different QI metrics and organ-sites for supporting QI-based decision-making that warrants success of a clinical trial.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Aryal, M. P., Lee, C., Hawkins, P. G., Chapman, C., Eisbruch, A., Mierzwa, M., & Cao, Y. (2019). Real-time quantitative assessment of accuracy and precision of blood volume derived from dce-mri in individual patients during a clinical trial. Tomography, 5(1), 61–67. https://doi.org/10.18383/j.tom.2018.00029

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free