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Published in: Abdominal Radiology 12/2018

01-12-2018

Diagnostic accuracy of MRI in assessing tumor regression and identifying complete response in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer after neoadjuvant treatment

Authors: Medhat Aker, Darren Boone, Anuradha Chandramohan, Bruce Sizer, Roger Motson, Tan Arulampalam

Published in: Abdominal Radiology | Issue 12/2018

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Abstract

Background

The diagnostic accuracy of Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) in restaging locally advanced rectal cancers (LARC) after neoadjuvant chemo-radio therapy (NCRT) has been under recent scrutiny. There is limited data on the accuracy of MRI and its timing in assessing tumor regression grade (TRG) and in identifying patients with complete response (CR). NCRT seems to cause tissue inflammation and oedema which renders reading the scans difficult for radiologist.

Aim

This study aims to assess the accuracy of MRI at different time intervals after NCRT in staging TRG and in identifying CR. Inter-observer agreement between 2 blinded radiologists will also be assessed.

Method

In this retrospective analysis, all patients diagnosed with LARC between January 2003 and 2014, who underwent long-course NCRT, who had at least one post-treatment MRI scan, and who underwent surgery with available pathology results are included. Histopathology staging is considered the reference standard. Accuracy of MRI in T staging and in TRG staging is assessed using weighted kappa. Accuracy, sensitivity, and specificity in identifying CR are calculated from a 2 × 2 contingency table. Inter-observer agreement between two-staging blinded radiologists is calculated using weighted kappa. These are calculated at 2 different time intervals after completion of NCRT.

Results

114 patients were identified who had a first post-treatment MRI scan at an average of 6.2 weeks after completion of NCRT. A subgroup of 68 patients had a second post-treatment MRI at an average of 10.4 weeks. Pathology results were available for 103 patients. By the second post-treatment scan, an additional 25% of patients experienced downstaging; accuracy in T staging increased from 43% to 57.4%; accuracy in TRG staging rose from 28.2% to 38.1%; accuracy in identifying CR rose from 83.4% to 84.1%. Inter-observer agreement in T staging rose from 0.1 for first post-treatment MRI to 0.206 for second post-treatment MRI.

Conclusion

This study advocates that restaging should occur at 10 weeks rather than the standard 6 weeks. This results in higher complete response rates and higher concordance with pathological specimens. Our results also showed that it is easier for radiologists to stage the MRI scans, resulting in higher inter-rater agreements.
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Metadata
Title
Diagnostic accuracy of MRI in assessing tumor regression and identifying complete response in patients with locally advanced rectal cancer after neoadjuvant treatment
Authors
Medhat Aker
Darren Boone
Anuradha Chandramohan
Bruce Sizer
Roger Motson
Tan Arulampalam
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Abdominal Radiology / Issue 12/2018
Print ISSN: 2366-004X
Electronic ISSN: 2366-0058
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00261-018-1627-8

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