Purpose: To investigate the potential of dosiomics in predicting radiotherapy-induced taste distortion (dysgeusia) in head & neck (H&N) cancer. Methods: A cohort of 80 H&N cancer patients treated with radical or adjuvant radiotherapy and with a follow-up of at least 24 months was enrolled. Treatment information, as well as tobacco and alcohol consumption were also collected. The whole tongue was manually delineated on the planning CT and mapped to the dose map retrieved from the treatment planning system. For every patient, 6 regions of the tongue were examined; for each of them, 145 dosiomic features were extracted from the dose map and fed to a logistic regression model to predict the grade of dysgeusia at follow-up, with and without including clinical features. A mean dose-based model was considered for reference. Results: Both dosiomics and mean dose models achieved good prediction performance for acute dysgeusia with AUC up to 0.88. For the dosiomic model, the central and anterior ⅔ regions of the tongue were the most predictive. For all models, a gradual reduction in the performance was observed at later times for chronic dysgeusia prediction, with higher values for dosiomics. The inclusion of smoke and alcohol habits did not improve model performances. Conclusion: The dosiomic analysis of the dose to the tongue identified features able to predict acute dysgeusia. Dosiomics resulted superior to the conventional mean dose-based model for chronic dysgeusia prediction. Larger, prospective studies are needed to support these results before integrating dosiomics in radiotherapy planning.

Dosiomic-based prediction of dysgeusia in head & neck cancer patients treated with radiotherapy

Bettinelli A.;Ferrari M.;Nicolai P.;Marturano F.
2023

Abstract

Purpose: To investigate the potential of dosiomics in predicting radiotherapy-induced taste distortion (dysgeusia) in head & neck (H&N) cancer. Methods: A cohort of 80 H&N cancer patients treated with radical or adjuvant radiotherapy and with a follow-up of at least 24 months was enrolled. Treatment information, as well as tobacco and alcohol consumption were also collected. The whole tongue was manually delineated on the planning CT and mapped to the dose map retrieved from the treatment planning system. For every patient, 6 regions of the tongue were examined; for each of them, 145 dosiomic features were extracted from the dose map and fed to a logistic regression model to predict the grade of dysgeusia at follow-up, with and without including clinical features. A mean dose-based model was considered for reference. Results: Both dosiomics and mean dose models achieved good prediction performance for acute dysgeusia with AUC up to 0.88. For the dosiomic model, the central and anterior ⅔ regions of the tongue were the most predictive. For all models, a gradual reduction in the performance was observed at later times for chronic dysgeusia prediction, with higher values for dosiomics. The inclusion of smoke and alcohol habits did not improve model performances. Conclusion: The dosiomic analysis of the dose to the tongue identified features able to predict acute dysgeusia. Dosiomics resulted superior to the conventional mean dose-based model for chronic dysgeusia prediction. Larger, prospective studies are needed to support these results before integrating dosiomics in radiotherapy planning.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3510124
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