@Article{FredericSampedro2015, author="Frederic Sampedro and Anna Domenech and Sergio Escalera and Ignasi Carrio", title="Deriving global quantitative tumor response parameters from 18F-FDG PET-CT scans in patients with non-Hodgkins lymphoma", journal="Nuclear Medicine Communications", year="2015", volume="36", number="4", pages="328--333", abstract="OBJECTIVES:The aim of the study was to address the need for quantifying the global cancer time evolution magnitude from a pair of time-consecutive positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) scans. In particular, we focus on the computation of indicators using image-processing techniques that seek to model non-Hodgkin{\textquoteright}s lymphoma (NHL) progression or response severity.MATERIALS AND METHODS:A total of 89 pairs of time-consecutive PET-CT scans from NHL patients were stored in a nuclear medicine station for subsequent analysis. These were classified by a consensus of nuclear medicine physicians into progressions, partial responses, mixed responses, complete responses, and relapses. The cases of each group were ordered by magnitude following visual analysis. Thereafter, a set of quantitative indicators designed to model the cancer evolution magnitude within each group were computed using semiautomatic and automatic image-processing techniques. Performance evaluation of the proposed indicators was measured by a correlation analysis with the expert-based visual analysis.RESULTS:The set of proposed indicators achieved Pearson{\textquoteright}s correlation results in each group with respect to the expert-based visual analysis: 80.2\% in progressions, 77.1\% in partial response, 68.3\% in mixed response, 88.5\% in complete response, and 100\% in relapse. In the progression and mixed response groups, the proposed indicators outperformed the common indicators used in clinical practice [changes in metabolic tumor volume, mean, maximum, peak standardized uptake value (SUV mean, SUV max, SUV peak), and total lesion glycolysis] by more than 40\%.CONCLUSION:Computing global indicators of NHL response using PET-CT imaging techniques offers a strong correlation with the associated expert-based visual analysis, motivating the future incorporation of such quantitative and highly observer-independent indicators in oncological decision making or treatment response evaluation scenarios.", optnote="HuPBA;MILAB", optnote="exported from refbase (http://refbase.cvc.uab.es/show.php?record=2605), last updated on Tue, 29 Oct 2019 09:44:30 +0100", doi="10.1097/MNM.0000000000000256" }