MRI-based microvascular invasion prediction in mass-forming intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma: survival and therapeutic benefit.

IF 4.7 2区 医学 Q1 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
European Radiology Pub Date : 2025-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-12-19 DOI:10.1007/s00330-024-11296-0
Ruofan Sheng, Beixuan Zheng, Yunfei Zhang, Wei Sun, Chun Yang, Jing Han, Mengsu Zeng, Jianjun Zhou
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objectives: To establish an MRI-based model for microvascular invasion (MVI) prediction in mass-forming intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (MF-iCCA) and further evaluate its potential survival and therapeutic benefit.

Methods: One hundred and fifty-six pathologically confirmed MF-iCCAs with traditional surgery (121 in training and 35 in validation cohorts), 33 with neoadjuvant treatment and 57 with first-line systemic therapy were retrospectively included. Univariate and multivariate regression analyses were performed to identify the independent predictors for MVI in the traditional surgery group, and an MVI-predictive model was constructed. Survival analyses were conducted and compared between MRI-predicted MVI-positive and MVI-negative MF-iCCAs in different treatment groups.

Results: Tumor multinodularity (odds ratio = 4.498, p < 0.001) and peri-tumor diffusion-weighted hyperintensity (odds ratio = 4.163, p < 0.001) were independently significant variables associated with MVI. AUC values for the predictive model were 0.760 [95% CI 0.674, 0.833] in the training cohort and 0.757 [95% CI 0.583, 0.885] in the validation cohort. Recurrence-free survival or progression-free survival of the MRI-predicted MVI-positive patients was significantly shorter than the MVI-negative patients in all three treatment groups (log-rank p < 0.001 to 0.046). The use of neoadjuvant therapy was not associated with improved postoperative recurrence-free survival for high-risk MF-iCCA patients in both MRI-predicted MVI-positive and MVI-negative groups (log-rank p = 0.79 and 0.27). Advanced MF-iCCA patients of the MRI-predicted MVI-positive group had significantly worse objective response rate than the MVI-negative group with systemic therapy (40.91% vs 76.92%, χ2 = 5.208, p = 0.022).

Conclusion: The MRI-based MVI-predictive model could be a potential biomarker for personalized risk stratification and survival prediction in MF-iCCA patients with varied therapies and may aid in candidate selection for systemic therapy.

Key points: Question Identifying intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (iCCA) patients at high risk for microvascular invasion (MVI) may inform prognostic risk stratification and guide clinical treatment decision. Findings We established an MRI-based predictive model for MVI in mass-forming-iCCA, integrating imaging features of tumor multinodularity and peri-tumor diffusion-weighted hyperintensity. Clinical relevance The MRI-based MVI-predictive model could be a potential biomarker for personalized risk stratification and survival prediction across varied therapies and may aid in therapeutic candidate selection for systemic therapy.

基于mri的肝内胆管癌微血管侵袭预测:生存和治疗效果。
目的:建立基于mri的成团型肝内胆管癌(MF-iCCA)微血管侵袭(MVI)预测模型,并进一步评估其潜在生存期和治疗效果。方法:回顾性分析156例经病理证实的传统手术MF-iCCAs患者(121例为训练组,35例为验证组),33例为新辅助治疗组,57例为一线全身治疗组。通过单因素和多因素回归分析,确定传统手术组MVI的独立预测因素,并构建MVI预测模型。对不同治疗组mri预测mvi阳性和mvi阴性的mf - icca进行生存分析和比较。结果:肿瘤多结节性(优势比= 4.498,p 2 = 5.208, p = 0.022)。结论:基于mri的mvi预测模型可能是一种潜在的生物标志物,可用于各种治疗的MF-iCCA患者的个性化风险分层和生存预测,并有助于选择全身治疗的候选人。识别微血管侵犯(MVI)高危肝内胆管癌(iCCA)患者可以为预后风险分层提供信息,指导临床治疗决策。我们建立了一个基于mri的肿块形成型icca MVI预测模型,整合肿瘤多结节性和肿瘤周围弥散加权高强度的影像学特征。基于mri的mvi预测模型可能是一种潜在的生物标志物,可用于各种治疗的个性化风险分层和生存预测,并可能有助于全身治疗的候选治疗选择。
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来源期刊
European Radiology
European Radiology 医学-核医学
CiteScore
11.60
自引率
8.50%
发文量
874
审稿时长
2-4 weeks
期刊介绍: European Radiology (ER) continuously updates scientific knowledge in radiology by publication of strong original articles and state-of-the-art reviews written by leading radiologists. A well balanced combination of review articles, original papers, short communications from European radiological congresses and information on society matters makes ER an indispensable source for current information in this field. This is the Journal of the European Society of Radiology, and the official journal of a number of societies. From 2004-2008 supplements to European Radiology were published under its companion, European Radiology Supplements, ISSN 1613-3749.
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