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H. Raziee



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    O10 - Stereotactic Ablative Body Radiotherapy (ID 104)

    • Event: WCLC 2013
    • Type: Oral Abstract Session
    • Track: Radiation Oncology + Radiotherapy
    • Presentations: 1
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      O10.06 - Inter-Rater Reliability of the Categorization of Late Radiographic Changes after Lung Stereotactic Body Radiation Therapy (SBRT) (ID 1901)

      16:15 - 17:45  |  Author(s): H. Raziee

      • Abstract
      • Presentation
      • Slides

      Background
      Radiographic changes following lung SBRT have been previously categorized into 4 groups: modified conventional pattern (A), mass-like fibrosis (B), scar-like fibrosis (C) and no evidence of increased density (D) (Dahele et al.).The purpose of this study was to assess the inter-rater reliability of this categorization in patients with early stage non-small cell lung cancer.

      Methods
      79 patients treated with SBRT for early stage NSCLC at a single institution who had a minimum follow-up of 6 months were included in this study. Serial post-treatment CT images were presented to expert clinicians (up to 6) familiar with post-SBRT radiographic changes and were scored by each individual in a blinded fashion according to the published categorization of A, B, C or D. The proportion of patients categorized as A, B, C or D at each interval was determined. Krippendorff's alpha (KA) was used to establish inter-rater reliability at each time point. A leave-one-out analysis was performed at each time point on each rater to determine the sensitivity of the KA score to an individual rater. To explore if a training effect existed the KA of the first and last 20 patients scored by the raters was determined.

      Results
      There were 351 ratings on 67 patients at 12mo, 250 ratings on 49 patients at 24mo, 169ratings on 31 patients at 36mo and 80 ratings on 14 patients at 48mo. The proportion of patients scored in each category of A,B,C &D is reported in Table 1. Table 1: Scale Category by Time-Point

      A (Modified-Conventional) B (Mass-like Fibrosis) C (Scar-like Fibrosis) D (No Evidence of Increased Density)
      6 months 43% 9% 6% 42%
      12 months 50% 16% 11% 23%
      18 months 46% 18% 16% 20%
      24 months 46% 22% 17% 15%
      36 months 40% 24% 21% 15%
      48 months 29% 24% 31% 16%
      Category A was the most common at all time points except 48 months when category C was the most common. KA was 0.28, 0.27, 0.18 and 0.27 at 12, 24, 36 and 48 months respectively. The range of KA in the leave-one-out analysis was 0.25-0.31, 0.24-0.27, 0.15-0.22 and 0.24-0.31 at 12, 24, 36 and 48 months respectively. The KA of the first 20 patients vs the last 20 patients was 0.34 vs 0.47 at 12 months.

      Conclusion
      The predominant pattern of post SBRT radiographic changes evolves over time. In this study categorization of late post-SBRT radiographic changes has moderate inter-rater agreement. There is a suggestion of a training effect with more experience. However, categorization of late radiographic changes following SBRT is challenging and may require specific training.

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    P1.08 - Poster Session 1 - Radiotherapy (ID 195)

    • Event: WCLC 2013
    • Type: Poster Session
    • Track: Radiation Oncology + Radiotherapy
    • Presentations: 1
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      P1.08-019 - Late Radiographic Changes After Lung Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy: Piloting a Recurrence Scale and a Synoptic Reporting Scale (ID 2209)

      09:30 - 16:30  |  Author(s): H. Raziee

      • Abstract

      Background
      Radiographic lung changes after Stereotactic Body Radiotherapy (SBRT) for non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) are difficult to interpret. The reliability of previous scoring systems and their relationship to local failure has not been assessed. The purpose of this study was to design a synoptic radiographic scale for characterizing late radiographic changes after SBRT and to determine the inter-rater reliability of the scale.

      Methods
      A Recurrence Scale (RS) was developed among lung radiation oncology/SBRT experts at a single institution, and a Synoptic Radiographic Scale (SRS) was designed in collaboration with an expert thoracic radiologist. For the RS, the suspicion for local recurrence on CT images was scored on a 5 point scale: 1) complete response, no recurrence; 2) fibrosis, not suspicious for recurrence; 3) fibrosis/mass, indeterminate for recurrence; 4) fibrosis/mass, suspicious for recurrence and 5) biopsy proven recurrence. On the SRS, CT changes were scored as ‘increasing’, ‘stable’, ‘decreasing’, ‘no change’ or ‘obscured’, along five dimensions: changes in the primary tumor site, involved lobe, consolidation, ground-glass opacity, and volume loss. Early stage NSCLC patients treated with SBRT at the institution with a minimum follow-up of 6 months were included. Serial post-treatment CT images at 12, 18, 24, 36, and 48 months were presented to the expert group (up to 6) who scored both scales in a blinded fashion. Krippendorff's alpha (KA) was used to assess inter-rater reliability. The association between RS score and known local failure was compared using Fisher’s Exact Test. The association between ‘growing tumor’ on the SRS and known local failure was compared using Fisher’s Exact Test.

      Results
      79 patients were scored; 7 of them had documented local failures. Experts did 11243 scorings in total, ranging from 2351 at 6 months to 480 at 48 months. For the RS, the KA was 0.27, 0.36, 0.23 and 0.45 at 12, 24, 36 and 48 months respectively. For the SRS, KA was 0.22, 0.14 and 0.11 for the treated tumor at 12, 24 and 48 months and 0.33, 0.36 and 0.22 for consolidation at 12, 24 and 36 months. The tumor was scored as obscured in 40% of patients by 24 months. Of patients with local failure, 71% were at least once scored as ‘suspicious for recurrence’ by at least one rater, compared to 28% in patients without failure (p = 0.03). 86% of patients with failure were scored at least once as increased opacity in tumor site by at least one of raters, compared to 35% in patients without failure (p = 0.01).

      Conclusion
      The RS has a significant relationship with local failure, and there is fair inter-agreement among experts on the suspicion of recurrence following SBRT. The SRS has low inter-rater reliability. Among its categories, only an increase in the opacity of treated tumor site is significantly related to failure. With future refinement of SRS categories, it can be a useful tool to standardize post-SBRT radiology reporting.