Aims This pilot study aims to determine if tumour heterogeneity assessed using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) radiomics-based texture analysis (TA) can differentiate between lipoma and atypical lipomatous tumour (ALT)/well differentiated liposarcoma (WDL).
Materials and Methods30 consecutive ALT/WDLs and 30 lipomas were included in the study, cases diagnosed both histologically and with murine double minute 2 (MDM2) gene amplification by fluoresence in situ hybridisation (FISH) in excision specimens. Multiple patient, MRI and MRTA factors were assessed. Heterogeneity was evaluated using a filtration-histogram technique based textural analysis on single axial proton density (PD) and coronal T1-W images of the most homogenously fatty component of the lesion.Results 33% of the diagnoses of ALT/WDL vs lipoma were confirmed using FISH MDM2 analysis.. ALT/WDLs were statistically different from lipomas in location (site in the body and depth from skin surface) and fat content, with p values of 0.021, 0.001, and 0.021 respectively. 9 of 36 (25%) texture parameters had significant differences between ALT/WDLs and lipomas on axial PD MRTA, with the most significant results at medium and coarse texture scales particularly mean intensity (p=0.003) at SSF=6, and kurtosis (p=0.012) at SSF=5. A cut-off value of <304 for coarse filtered texture on axial PD MRI identified ALT from lipoma with a sensitivity and specificity of 70% (AUC=0.73, p=0.003).
ConclusionsTexture heterogeneity quantified at fine, medium, coarse texture scales are significant differentiators of lipoma and ALT/WDL with the difference particularly marked in medium and coarse texture scales for two MR TA parameters: mean and kurtosis.