Radiogenomics of clear cell renal cell carcinoma: associations between CT imaging features and mutations

Christoph A Karlo, Pier Luigi Di Paolo, Joshua Chaim, A Ari Hakimi, Irina Ostrovnaya, Paul Russo, Hedvig Hricak, Robert Motzer, James J Hsieh, Oguz Akin, Christoph A Karlo, Pier Luigi Di Paolo, Joshua Chaim, A Ari Hakimi, Irina Ostrovnaya, Paul Russo, Hedvig Hricak, Robert Motzer, James J Hsieh, Oguz Akin

Abstract

Purpose: To investigate associations between computed tomographic (CT) features of clear cell renal cell carcinoma (RCC) and mutations in VHL, PBRM1, SETD2, KDM5C, or BAP1 genes.

Materials and methods: The institutional review board approved this retrospective, hypothesis-generating study of 233 patients with clear cell RCC and waived the informed consent requirement. The study was HIPAA compliant. Three radiologists independently reviewed pretreatment CT images of all clear cell RCCs without knowledge of their genomic profile. One radiologist measured largest diameter and enhancement parameters of each clear cell RCC. Associations between CT features and mutations in VHL, PBRM1, SETD2, KDM5C, and BAP1 genes were tested by using the Fisher exact test. Associations between mutations and size and enhancement were assessed by using the independent t test. Interreader agreement was calculated by using the Fleiss κ.

Results: Mutation frequencies among clear cell RCCs were as follows: VHL, 53.2% (124 of 233); PBRM1, 28.8% (67 of 233); SETD2, 7.3% (17 of 233); KDM5C, 6.9% (16 of 233); and BAP1, 6.0% (14 of 233). Mutations of VHL were significantly associated with well-defined tumor margins (P = .013), nodular tumor enhancement (P = .021), and gross appearance of intratumoral vascularity (P = .018). Mutations of KDM5C and BAP1 were significantly associated with evidence of renal vein invasion (P = .022 and .046, respectively). The genotype of solid clear cell RCC differed significantly from the genotype of multicystic clear cell RCC. While mutations of SETD2, KDM5C, and BAP1 were absent in multicystic clear cell RCC, mutations of VHL (P = .016) and PBRM1 (P = .017) were significantly more common among solid clear cell RCC. Interreader agreement for CT feature assessments ranged from substantial to excellent (κ = 0.791-0.912).

Conclusion: This preliminary radiogenomics analysis of clear cell RCC revealed associations between CT features and underlying mutations that warrant further investigation and validation.

©RSNA, 2013

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Illustration of CT features of clear-cell renal cell carcinoma (ccRCC) investigated in this study: (A) necrosis; (B) renal vein invasion; (C) ill-defined margin; (D) nodular enhancement; (E) calcifications; (F) multicystic architecture; (G) collecting system invasion; (H) gross appearance of intratumoral vasculature.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Subject-based color map illustrating mutations and CT features.

Source: PubMed

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