作者
Yu Zhang,Jie Zou,Linrui Li,Mengyu Han,Jiangning Dong,Xin Wang
摘要
Background The prediction of postoperative recurrence and survival in cervical cancer patients has been a major clinical challenge. The combination of clinical parameters, inflammatory markers, intravoxel incoherent motion diffusion-weighted imaging (IVIM-DWI), and MRI-derived radiomics is expected to support the prediction of recurrence-free survival (RFS), disease-free survival (DFS), tumor-specific survival (CSS), and overall survival (OS) of cervical cancer patients after surgery. Methods A retrospective analysis of 181 cervical cancer patients with continuous follow-up was completed. The parameters of IVIM-DWI and radiomics were measured, analyzed, and screened. The LASSO regularization was used to calculate the radiomics score (Rad-score). Multivariate Cox regression analysis was used to construct nomogram models for predicting postoperative RFS, DFS, CSS, and OS in cervical cancer patients, with internal and external validation. Results Clinical stage, parametrial infiltration, internal irradiation, D-value, and Rad-score were independent prognostic factors for RFS; Squamous cell carcinoma antigen, internal irradiation, D-value, f-value and Rad-score were independent prognostic factors for DFS; Maximum tumor diameter, lymph node metastasis, platelets, D-value and Rad-score were independent prognostic factors for CSS; Lymph node metastasis, systemic inflammation response index, D-value and Rad-score were independent prognostic factors for OS. The AUCs of each model predicting RFS, DFS, CSS, and OS at 1, 3, and 5 years were 0.985, 0.929, 0.910 and 0.833, 0.818, 0.816 and 0.832, 0.863, 0.891 and 0.804, 0.812, 0.870, respectively. Conclusions Nomograms based on clinical and imaging parameters showed high clinical value in predicting postoperative RFS, DFS, CSS, and OS of cervical cancer patients and can be used as prognostic markers.