Prognostic assessment of osteolytic lesions and mechanical properties of bones bearing breast cancer using neural network and finite element analysis.

Journal: Mechanobiology in medicine
Published Date:

Abstract

The management of skeletal-related events (SREs), particularly the prevention of pathological fractures, is crucial for cancer patients. Current clinical assessment of fracture risk is mostly based on medical images, but incorporating sequential images in the assessment remains challenging. This study addressed this issue by leveraging a comprehensive dataset consisting of 260 longitudinal micro-computed tomography (μCT) scans acquired in normal and breast cancer bearing mice. A machine learning (ML) model based on a spatial-temporal neural network was built to forecast bone structures from previous μCT scans, which were found to have an overall similarity coefficient (Dice) of 0.814 with ground truths. Despite the predicted lesion volumes (18.5 ​% ​± ​15.3 ​%) being underestimated by ∼21 ​% than the ground truths' (22.1 ​% ​± ​14.8 ​%), the time course of the lesion growth was better represented in the predicted images than the preceding scans (10.8 ​% ​± ​6.5 ​%). Under virtual biomechanical testing using finite element analysis (FEA), the predicted bone structures recapitulated the loading carrying behaviors of the ground truth structures with a positive correlation (y ​= ​0.863x) and a high coefficient of determination (R ​= ​0.955). Interestingly, the compliances of the predicted and ground truth structures demonstrated nearly identical linear relationships with the lesion volumes. In summary, we have demonstrated that bone deterioration could be proficiently predicted using machine learning in our preclinical dataset, suggesting the importance of large longitudinal clinical imaging datasets in fracture risk assessment for cancer bone metastasis.

Authors

  • Shubo Wang
  • Tiankuo Chu
    Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716, USA.
  • Murtaza Wasi
    Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716, USA.
  • Rosa M Guerra
    Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Delaware, Newark, DE 19716, USA.
  • Xu Yuan
    School of Software, Dalian University of Technology, Dalian, Liaoning, China david@dlut.edu.cn.
  • Liyun Wang
    ( 450046) Henan University of Chinese Medicine, Zhengzhou 450046, China.

Keywords

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