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Michael F. McNitt-Gray, PhD: CT imaging as a biomarker: the role of CT in evaluating lung cancer treatment efficacy May 15, 2008- 8:40 AM CT Imaging as a Biomarker: The Role of CT in Evaluating Lung Cancer Treatment Efficacy The Role of CT in Lung Cancer Screening/ Early Detection Characterization/Diagnosis – low dose CT to detect early stage disease Michael F. McNitt-Gray, PhD Professor Department of Radiological Sciences Director Biomedical Physics Graduate Program David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA Characterization Task IDEAL Goal of Characterization – Distinguish cancers (Malignancies) from non--cancers (Benign) non – Further Distinctions Possible? Different Types of Lung Cancers? – Characterize detected lung nodules as benign or malignant (false positives) – Is patient responding to treatment? How can you tell? Look for change on CT – Especially important for evaluating new therapeutic agents (e.g. clinical trials) Characterization Task - Approaches 1. Change Over Time (Multiple Exams) Currently, for Nodule characterization, dynamic CT imaging with contrast enhancement is used Measure Average Attenuation within ROI Then measure Enhancement Enhancement:: – – Determine Boundary of the Nodule Measure Volume or Some Density Measure – – – – – Density Size Shape Texture Contrast Enhancement, etc. 2. Single Exam to Evaluate Image Characteristics such as: – Adenocarcinoma from bronchiolaveolar carcinoma? – Aggressive from indolent tumors? Background Treatment Response Lung Nodule Enhancement Injection of Contrast at t=0 s Enhancement = [ROI mean (Max post contrast)] – [ROI mean(0 mean(0)] Stanford Radiology 10th Annual Multidetector CT Symposium t<0 s t=45s t=90s t=180s t=300s 1 Michael F. McNitt-Gray, PhD: CT imaging as a biomarker: the role of CT in evaluating lung cancer treatment efficacy May 15, 2008- 8:40 AM Treatment of Lung Cancer Lung Nodule Enhancement Number of Ndules at Each Enhancement Level Almost all cancers show enhancement (increased blood supply) l ) Many benign processes show enhancement as well Nodule Enhancement in HU for Benign and Malignant Nodules 35 – Are they responding to treatment? – How can we know this? If Enhancement <20, then B If Enhancement > 20, then ? 30 25 20 Benign 15 Malignant For Patients with known lung cancer or disease that is metastatic to the lung Key question is 10 5 6 14 8 16 0 17 2 13 88 10 0 11 2 12 4 40 76 52 64 -8 28 4 16 -2 0 0 Enhancement in HU Evaluation Criteria using CT Assess response by looking for **CHANGE **CHANGE**: **: Currently – Assess changes in Morphological Measures - Size – Unidimensional diameter measurement RECIST-- next slide RECIST – Bidirectional diameter measurements Future RECIST – Longest Diameter of lesion – Assess change in size using tumor volumes – What about change in other measures/characteristics Unidimensional measurement Up to 5 lesions E Easy to iimplement l May be unreliable estimate of change – – – – Mass Density Shape Function? difficulty in estimating irregular lesions discrepancies in scan planes between scans patient positioning differences between scans intraintra- and interinter-observer variability Determining Response Tumor is clearly getting smaller – Will a single diameter reflect this? – How can me measure this: Stanford Radiology 10th Annual Multidetector CT Symposium Accurately (do we know the “truth”?) Precisely (how reproducible?) Can we determine whether this tumor is responding at some point earlier than 52 weeks? 2 Michael F. McNitt-Gray, PhD: CT imaging as a biomarker: the role of CT in evaluating lung cancer treatment efficacy May 15, 2008- 8:40 AM Determining Response How do we know the change we are seeing is real change and not just measurement variability? What is the minimum amount of change we can detect? How long would it normally take to see this minimum detectable change? Baseline Max Diameter = 36.2 mm; Baseline + 20 weeks, Max Diameter = 32.6 mm (10% decrease) Would be characterized as stable/no change (30% decrease is required to classify as regression); – A few weeks? Months? Response Baseline Max diameter = 36.2 mm; Baseline + 20 weeks, Max diameter = 32.6 mm; Tumor volume= 6.10 cm3 tumor volume= 9.48 cm3, a 55% increase Current/Future Research Areas Moving from anatomic description (size, shape, location) to function Fusion with other imaging modalities (PET--CT) (PET Patient Response is not so clear here RECIST (single diameter of lesion) is not full information here CT Imaging of Contrast Agent Obtain images through nodule – Prior to injection of contrast agent (T=0) – Obtain images at 4 points after contrast injection Stanford Radiology 10th Annual Multidetector CT Symposium T=45, 90, 180 and 300 sec 4D map of contrast enhancement 3 Michael F. McNitt-Gray, PhD: CT imaging as a biomarker: the role of CT in evaluating lung cancer treatment efficacy T=45 T 45 T=180 T=90 T 90 T=300 Dynamic Imaging Protocol Instead of 4 time points post contrast More rapid imaging Quantitative measurement Tumor TimeTime-Attenuation Curve (TAC) Plot average intensity of 2D ROI vs time 60 45, 53.16070773 Net Enhancementt(HU) T=0 T 0 May 15, 2008- 8:40 AM – Up to 2020-25 time points 40, 48.13276675 35, 47.46169323 50, 45.96992082 40 94, 36.94143436 142, 36.37639939 172, 32.76206526 25, 32.10861385 24,30.663381 31.06844726 22, 05 21, 28.22116968 201, 28.14162955 18, 26.25342774 23, 26.08477023 20, 25.46742241 19, 23.14017812 17, 22.06122712 261, 22.60579333 20 16, 17.60569944 15, 9.944659313 0 0, 0 0 PET/CT fused images 50 100 150 Time(s) 200 250 Summary CT is being used in several ways in regards to Lung Cancer – Screening (early detection) – Characterization (distinguish between benign and malignant) – Treatment response Stanford Radiology 10th Annual Multidetector CT Symposium 4 Michael F. McNitt-Gray, PhD: CT imaging as a biomarker: the role of CT in evaluating lung cancer treatment efficacy May 15, 2008- 8:40 AM Future Investigations Can CT be used as a biomarker – Can it tell if image data indicates a response p to therapy? py Does volume change? Does density change? Some other change that can be measured reliably, such as function (contrast uptake)? Fusion with other modalities (PET (PET--CT) What will it take to determine if change is significant? Stanford Radiology 10th Annual Multidetector CT Symposium 5