Impactful Findings from Medical Imaging Research

Dive into a collection of short summaries of recent medical imaging studies that shed light on hot topics such as structured reporting, texture analysis, radiomics, or novel imaging biomarkers. Identify the role mint Lesion™ played in these studies and contact us if you have any questions about our software platform.

Here you will find a detailed list of scientific publications in which mint Lesion™ has had a significant impact:

Explore the publications

University Hospital Ulm: Pilot study shows discriminatory power of MRI-based 3d texture analysis for bone lesions

Distinguishing between enchondroma, a benign tumor, and low-grade chondrosarcoma, which is a low-aggressivity malignancy, is a frequent challenge, as the lesions are both histologically and radiographically very similar. Given the fact that enchondroma only requires regular follow-up but chondrosarcoma needs surgical resection, differentiating between them becomes extremely important when making a decision on treatment strategies.

Dr. Catharina S. Lisson and colleagues from several departments at the University of Ulm pointed out that MRI-based texture analysis may assist in differentiating these two entities [1]. “The purpose of our study was to identify texture parameters that have the potential to act as non-invasive imaging biomarkers for characterization of chondrosarcoma,” they explained.

Twenty-two patients were retrospectively evaluated: 11 patients with low-grade chondrosarcoma and 11 patients with enchondroma. Texture analysis was performed in four MRI sequences using mint Lesion. Kurtosis, entropy, skewness, mean of positive pixels (MPP), and uniformity of positive pixel distribution (UPP) were obtained and correlated with histopathology.

According to the results, significant differences were found in four of 20 texture parameters with regard to the different MRI sequences (p < 0.01). In contrast-enhanced T1, the area under the curve (AUC) values to discriminate chondrosarcoma from enchondroma were 0.876 for kurtosis and 0.826 for skewness. In non-contrast T1, the values were 0.851 for entropy and 0.822 for UPP. The highest discriminatory power had kurtosis in contrast-enhanced T1w, with a high sensitivity (82%), specificity (91%), and accuracy (86%).

“Despite encouraging results of emerging studies that show its eligibility in differentiating between tumor types and grading, response monitoring, and outcome prediction, texture analysis has not yet found its way into routine clinical practice,” Dr. Lisson said. “We do hope that further studies with a larger patient population will confirm our findings and thus will lead to a change of the current indication for biopsy and resection of bone lesions.”

 

[1] Lisson, C.S., Lisson, C.G., Flosdorf, K. et al. Eur Radiol (2018) 28: 468. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00330-017-5014-6

Related Resources

Related Resources

Mint in 30 Minutes - How to adopt radiomics research, clinical trial management, and cognitive assistance in clinical routine

During this year’s virtual ECR 2020, we provided an insight into data-driven radiology with our Mint in 30 Minutes webcast. Using live software…

Clinical trial excellence for routine covid-19 assessment

37 minute(s)

Mint Medical is on the front lines in the fight against COVID-19, proving that radiology can act as a role model for gathering evidence by utilizing…

ExploreCOVID: An explorative cohort study to identify optimal CT imaging biomarkers in combination with clinical markers and PCR-RT for the diagnosis and therapy response assessment of COVID-19

Funded by the German Federal Ministry of Education and Research, the ExploreCOVID project aims to analyze patient history and clinical as well as…