“…Compared with Adk, Sqc is characterized by higher SUV max , AUC-IVH, energy GLMC , entropy GLCM , sum entropy, difference entropy, and inverse different moment and by lower homogeneity GLCM , sum of squares, angular second moment, ratio of non-zero Gr , and difference variance 60–62 .
Prognostic and predictive role
|
Heterogeneity (i.e., AUC-CSH) can predict recurrence in pN0 Adk patients who have undergone curative surgery but not in Sqk patients (high heterogeneity is associated with a shorter DFS) 61 . |
Best prognostic value for overall survival is found for relative portions of the tumor above higher uptakes defined as SUV max > 80% (i.e., V 80 ) in patients who received radiation therapy (sequential chemoradiation, concurrent chemoradiation, or only radiation). The higher the portion above higher uptake (V 80 ), the better the prognosis 29, 80 . |
Heterogeneity (i.e., low AUC-CSH) identifies patients with inoperable stage III NSCLC with poor PFS 75 . |
High SUV max , large MTV, and high heterogeneity (i.e., high entropy GLCM , high asphericity, homogeneity GLCM , and high dissimilarity, size-zone variability, and low zone percentage) are associated with poorer OS and RFS in stage I–III NSCLC 35, 73, 74, 83 . |
Tumor heterogeneity (i.e., entropy GLCM ) is associated with response to radiation therapy in NSCLC (DSS is lower for patients with high entropy GLCM ) 79 . |
Lesions in responders (complete or partial response) to chemoradiotherapy are characterized by lower coarseness, contrast NGTDM , and busyness than non-responders (stable or progressive disease). High coarseness values are associated with an increased risk of progression (increased risk of death), whereas high contrast NGTDM and busyness values are associated with a lower risk of progression (PFS and LPFS) 14 . |
Large primary tumors with low SumAverage (i.e., more heterogeneous) have a poor prognosis following chemoradiotherapy 76 . |
Lesions in responders to erlotinib are characterized by lower heterogeneity than those in non-responders. |
…”