Copenhagen, Denmark
Onsite/Online

ESTRO 2022

Session Item

Saturday
May 07
10:30 - 11:30
Poster Station 1
03: Functional imaging & modelling
Eliana Maria Vasquez Osorio, United Kingdom
1300
Poster Discussion
Physics
Early prediction of therapeutic response by regular functional MRI during the treatment of NPC
Wing Lun Mui, Hong Kong (SAR) China
PD-0154

Abstract

Early prediction of therapeutic response by regular functional MRI during the treatment of NPC
Authors:

Wing Lun Mui1,2, Anne Wing Mui Lee2, Wai Tong Ng2, Victor Ho Fun Lee2, Varut Vardhanabhuti3, Shei Yee Man1, Daniel Tsin Tien Chua4, Xin Yuan Guan2

1Hong Kong Sanatorium and Hospital, Department of Radiotherapy, Hong Kong, Hong Kong (SAR) China; 2The University of Hong Kong, Department of Clinical Oncology, Hong Kong, Hong Kong (SAR) China; 3The University of Hong Kong, Department of Diagnostic Radiology, Hong Kong, Hong Kong (SAR) China; 4Hong Kong Sanatorium and Hospital, Department of Medicine, Hong Kong, Hong Kong (SAR) China

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Purpose or Objective

Conventional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is used to review tumour morphological changes. Functional MRI measures tumour physiological changes like vascular permeability, cellularity and metabolite concentrations, which occur earlier than morphological changes during treatment. Whether these early physiological changes in nasopharyngeal tumours during treatment can be predictive biomarkers for treatment outcomes are still unknown.

Material and Methods

Nineteen patients with nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) who have received concurrent chemo-radiation therapy in 7 weeks were recruited for prospective longitudinal monitoring by weekly functional MRI scans. Dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) MRI, diffusion-weighted (DW) MRI and MR spectroscopy (MRS) were scanned before treatment, weekly during treatment and post-treatment. Three patients whose post-treatment nasopharyngeal tumour volume shrinkages less than 50% are classified as poor responders to the treatments, while the rest are classified as responders. Tumour vascular permeability parameters, water diffusivity characteristics and metabolite concentrations were studied with DCE-MRI, DW-MRI and MRS respectively at different time points for any significant difference between responders and poor responders to the treatments. Vascular permeability parameters were measured by DCE-MRI following Tofts compartment model between the blood plasma and the extra-vascular extra-cellular space (EES). They include volume transfer constant from blood plasma to EES (Ktrans), rate constant from EES to blood plasma (Kep), volume of EES per unit volume of tissue (Ve) and initial area under curve for 60s of contrast arrival (iAUC60) in the time-intensity curve. Water diffusivity characteristics were measure by DW-MRI with apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values. Metabolite concentrations were measured by the corresponding peaks on MRS spectrum.

Results

Our results show that in DCE-MRI, the mean increases in Ve from the first week to the third week of treatment are significantly different between responders (41.9%, SD 27.2%) and poor-responders (5.6%, SD 17.7%) (p=0.039). In DW-MRI, the mean increases in ADC from pre-treatment to the third week of treatment are marginally significant between responders (41.8%, SD 28.0%) and poor-responders (16.0%, SD 5.9%) (p=0.07).

Conclusion

Our results demonstrate that early changes in tumour vascular permeability and diffusivity in NPC during the concurrent chemo-radiation therapy are associated with post-treatment tumour shrinkage, which serves important prognostic values in predicting tumour shrinkage at the early phase of treatment. We anticipate our study to be a starting point for investigating the applications of functional MRI scans as the prognostic tools for early prediction and therapeutic monitoring for NPC patients with a larger cohort.