Objective: Differentiating intramedullary spinal cord tumor (IMSCT) from spinal cord tumefactive demyelinating lesion (scTDL) remains challenging with standard diagnostic approaches. This study aims to develop and evaluate the effectiveness of a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based radiomics model for distinguishing scTDL from IMSCT before treatment initiation.
Methods: A total of 75 patients were analyzed in this retrospective study, comprising 55 with IMSCT and 20 with scTDL. Radiomics features were extracted from T1- and T2-weighted imaging (T1&T2WI) scans upon admission. Ten classification algorithms were employed: logistic regression (LR); naive bayes (NaiveBayes); support vector machine (SVM); k nearest neighbors (KNN); random forest (RF); extra trees (ExtraTrees); eXtreme gradient boosting (XGBoost); light gradient boosting machine (LightGBM); gradient boosting (GradientBoosting); and multi-Layer perceptron (MLP). The performance of the optimal model was then compared to radiologists' assessments.
Results: This study developed 30 predictive models using ten classifiers across two imaging sequences. The MLP model with two sequences (T1&T2WI) emerged as the most effective one, showing superior accuracy in MRI analysis with an area under the curve (AUC) of 0.991 in training and 0.962 in testing. Moreover, statistical analyses highlighted the radiomics model significantly outperformed radiologists' assessments (p < 0.05) in distinguishing between IMSCT and scTDL.
Conclusion: We present an MRI-based radiomics model with high diagnostic accuracy in differentiating IMSCT from scTDL. The model's performance was comparable to junior radiologists, highlighting its potential as an effective diagnostic aid in clinical practice.
Keywords: Intramedullary spinal cord tumor; Magnetic resonance images; Radiomics; Tumefactive demyelinating lesion.
© 2024. The Author(s).