» Articles » PMID: 37453559

ReIGNITE Radiation Therapy Boost: A Prospective, International Study of Radiation Oncologists' Accuracy in Contouring Prostate Tumors for Focal Radiation Therapy Boost on Conventional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Alone or With Assistance Of...

Abstract

Purpose: In a phase III randomized trial, adding a radiation boost to tumor(s) visible on MRI improved prostate cancer (PCa) disease-free and metastasis-free survival without additional toxicity. Radiation oncologists' ability to identify prostate tumors is critical to widely adopting intraprostatic tumor radiotherapy boost for patients. A diffusion MRI biomarker, called the Restriction Spectrum Imaging restriction score (RSIrs), has been shown to improve radiologists' identification of clinically significant PCa. We hypothesized that (1) radiation oncologists would find accurately delineating PCa tumors on conventional MRI challenging and (2) using RSIrs maps would improve radiation oncologists' accuracy for PCa tumor delineation.

Methods And Materials: In this multi-institutional, international, prospective study, 44 radiation oncologists (participants) and 2 expert radiologists (experts) contoured prostate tumors on 39 total patient cases using conventional MRI with or without RSIrs maps. Participant volumes were compared to the consensus expert volumes. Contouring accuracy metrics included percent overlap with expert volume, Dice coefficient, conformal number, and maximum distance beyond expert volume.

Results: 1604 participant volumes were produced. 40 of 44 participants (91%) completely missed ≥1 expert-defined target lesion without RSIrs, compared to 13 of 44 (30%) with RSIrs maps. On conventional MRI alone, 134 of 762 contour attempts (18%) completely missed the target, compared to 18 of 842 (2%) with RSIrs maps. Use of RSIrs maps improved all contour accuracy metrics by approximately 50% or more. Mixed effects modeling confirmed that RSIrs maps were the main variable driving improvement in all metrics. System Usability Scores indicated RSIrs maps significantly improved the contouring experience (72 vs. 58, p < 0.001).

Conclusions: Radiation oncologists struggle with accurately delineating visible PCa tumors on conventional MRI. RSIrs maps improve radiation oncologists' ability to target MRI-visible tumors for prostate tumor boost.

Citing Articles

Advanced Restriction Imaging and Reconstruction Technology for Prostate Magnetic Resonance Imaging (ART-Pro): A Study Protocol for a Multicenter, Multinational Trial Evaluating Biparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging and Advanced, Quantitative....

Baxter M, Conlin C, Bagrodia A, Barrett T, Bartsch H, Brau A Eur Urol Open Sci. 2025; 71():132-143.

PMID: 39811103 PMC: 11730575. DOI: 10.1016/j.euros.2024.12.003.


Partial or focal brachytherapy for prostate cancer: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Gutierrez-Valencia E, Navarro-Domenech I, Zhou K, Barcelona M, Fazelzad R, Ramotar M Br J Radiol. 2024; 98(1167):354-367.

PMID: 39700435 PMC: 11840170. DOI: 10.1093/bjr/tqae254.


Histopathology-validated gross tumor volume delineations of intraprostatic lesions using PSMA-positron emission tomography/multiparametric magnetic resonance imaging.

Grefve J, Soderkvist K, Gunnlaugsson A, Sandgren K, Jonsson J, Keeratijarut Lindberg A Phys Imaging Radiat Oncol. 2024; 31:100633.

PMID: 39286772 PMC: 11402543. DOI: 10.1016/j.phro.2024.100633.


Focal radiotherapy boost to MR-visible tumor for prostate cancer: a systematic review.

Dornisch A, Zhong A, Poon D, Tree A, Seibert T World J Urol. 2024; 42(1):56.

PMID: 38244059 PMC: 10799816. DOI: 10.1007/s00345-023-04745-w.


Urethra contouring on computed tomography urethrogram versus magnetic resonance imaging for stereotactic body radiotherapy in prostate cancer.

Ong W, Allan Hupman M, Davidson M, Ruschin M, Detsky J, Liu S Clin Transl Radiat Oncol. 2024; 45:100722.

PMID: 38234697 PMC: 10792737. DOI: 10.1016/j.ctro.2023.100722.


References
1.
Yamin G, Schenker-Ahmed N, Shabaik A, Adams D, Bartsch H, Kuperman J . Voxel Level Radiologic-Pathologic Validation of Restriction Spectrum Imaging Cellularity Index with Gleason Grade in Prostate Cancer. Clin Cancer Res. 2016; 22(11):2668-74. PMC: 4896066. DOI: 10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-15-2429. View

2.
Purysko A, Magi-Galluzzi C, Mian O, Sittenfeld S, Davicioni E, du Plessis M . Correlation between MRI phenotypes and a genomic classifier of prostate cancer: preliminary findings. Eur Radiol. 2019; 29(9):4861-4870. PMC: 6684343. DOI: 10.1007/s00330-019-06114-x. View

3.
Zhong A, Digma L, Hussain T, Feng C, Conlin C, Tye K . Automated Patient-level Prostate Cancer Detection with Quantitative Diffusion Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Eur Urol Open Sci. 2023; 47:20-28. PMC: 9806706. DOI: 10.1016/j.euros.2022.11.009. View

4.
Johnson D, Raman S, Mirak S, Kwan L, Bajgiran A, Hsu W . Detection of Individual Prostate Cancer Foci via Multiparametric Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Eur Urol. 2018; 75(5):712-720. DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2018.11.031. View

5.
Brisbane W, Priester A, Ballon J, Kwan L, Delfin M, Felker E . Targeted Prostate Biopsy: Umbra, Penumbra, and Value of Perilesional Sampling. Eur Urol. 2022; 82(3):303-310. DOI: 10.1016/j.eururo.2022.01.008. View