Neuroimaging differentiation of glioblastoma, primary central nervous system lymphoma (PCNSL) and solitary brain metastasis (BM) remains challenging in specific cases showing similar appearances or atypical features. Overall, advanced MRI protocols have high diagnostic reliability, but their limited worldwide availability, coupled with the overlapping of specific neuroimaging features among tumor subgroups, represent significant drawbacks and entail disparities in the planning and management of these oncological patients.
To evaluate the classification performance metrics of a deep learning algorithm trained on T1-weighted gadolinium-enhanced (T1Gd) MRI scans of glioblastomas, atypical PCNSLs and BMs.
We enrolled 121 patients (glioblastoma: n=47; PCNSL: n=37; BM: n=37) who had undergone preoperative T1Gd-MRI and histopathological confirmation. Each lesion was segmented, and all ROIs were exported in a DICOM dataset. The patient cohort was then split in a training and hold-out test sets following a 70/30 ratio. A Resnet101 model, a deep neural network (DNN), was trained on the training set and validated on the hold-out test set to differentiate glioblastomas, PCNSLs and BMs on T1Gd-MRI scans.
The DNN achieved optimal classification performance in distinguishing PCNSLs (AUC: 0.98; 95%CI: 0.95 - 1.00) and glioblastomas (AUC: 0.90; 95%CI: 0.81 - 0.97) and moderate ability in differentiating BMs (AUC: 0.81; 95%CI: 0.70 - 0.95). This performance may allow clinicians to correctly identify patients eligible for lesion biopsy or surgical resection.
We trained and internally validated a deep learning model able to reliably differentiate ambiguous cases of PCNSLs, glioblastoma and BMs by means of T1Gd-MRI. The proposed predictive model may provide a low-cost, easily-accessible and high-speed decision-making support for eligibility to diagnostic brain biopsy or maximal tumor resection in atypical cases.