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External validation of the ovarian-adnexal reporting and data system (O-RADS) lexicon and the international ovarian tumor analysis 2-step strategy to stratify ovarian tumors into O-RADS risk groups

Authors :
Stefan Timmerman
Lil Valentin
Jolien Ceusters
Antonia C. Testa
Chiara Landolfo
Povilas Sladkevicius
Caroline Van Holsbeke
Ekaterini Domali
Robert Fruscio
Elisabeth Epstein
Dorella Franchi
Marek J. Kudla
Valentina Chiappa
Juan L. Alcazar
Francesco P. G. Leone
Francesca Buonomo
Maria Elisabetta Coccia
Stefano Guerriero
Nandita Deo
Ligita Jokubkiene
Jeroen Kaijser
Giovanni Scambia
Rochelle Andreotti
Dirk Timmerman
Tom Bourne
Ben Van Calster
Wouter Froyman
Timmerman, S
Valentin, L
Ceusters, J
Testa, A
Landolfo, C
Sladkevicius, P
Van Holsbeke, C
Domali, E
Fruscio, R
Epstein, E
Franchi, D
Kudla, M
Chiappa, V
Alcazar, J
Leone, F
Buonomo, F
Coccia, M
Guerriero, S
Deo, N
Jokubkiene, L
Kaijser, J
Scambia, G
Andreotti, R
Timmerman, D
Bourne, T
Van Calster, B
Froyman, W
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

ImportanceCorrect diagnosis of ovarian cancer results in better prognosis. Adnexal lesions can be stratified into the Ovarian-Adnexal Reporting and Data System (O-RADS) risk of malignancy categories with either the O-RADS lexicon, proposed by the American College of Radiology, or the International Ovarian Tumor Analysis (IOTA) 2-step strategy.ObjectiveTo investigate the diagnostic performance of the O-RADS lexicon and the IOTA 2-step strategy.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsRetrospective external diagnostic validation study based on interim data of IOTA5, a prospective international multicenter cohort study, in 36 oncology referral centers or other types of centers. A total of 8519 consecutive adult patients presenting with an adnexal mass between January 1, 2012, and March 1, 2015, and treated either with surgery or conservatively were included in this diagnostic study. Twenty-five patients were excluded for withdrawal of consent, 2777 were excluded from 19 centers that did not meet predefined data quality criteria, and 812 were excluded because they were already in follow-up at recruitment. The analysis included 4905 patients with a newly detected adnexal mass in 17 centers that met predefined data quality criteria. Data were analyzed from January 31 to March 1, 2022.ExposuresStratification into O-RADS categories (malignancy risk Main Outcomes and MeasuresObserved prevalence of malignancy in each O-RADS risk category, as well as sensitivity and specificity. The reference standard was the status of the tumor at inclusion, determined by histology or clinical and ultrasonographic follow-up for 1 year. Multiple imputation was used for uncertain outcomes owing to inconclusive follow-up information.ResultsMedian age of the 4905 patients was 48 years (IQR, 36-62 years). Data on race and ethnicity were not collected. A total of 3441 tumors (70%) were benign, 978 (20%) were malignant, and 486 (10%) had uncertain classification. Using the O-RADS lexicon resulted in 1.1% (24 of 2196) observed prevalence of malignancy in O-RADS 2, 4% (34 of 857) in O-RADS 3, 27% (246 of 904) in O-RADS 4, and 78% (732 of 939) in O-RADS 5; the corresponding results for the IOTA 2-step strategy were 0.9% (18 of 1984), 4% (58 of 1304), 30% (206 of 690), and 82% (756 of 927). At the 10% risk threshold (O-RADS 4-5), the O-RADS lexicon had 92% sensitivity (95% CI, 87%-96%) and 80% specificity (95% CI, 74%-85%), and the IOTA 2-step strategy had 91% sensitivity (95% CI, 84%-95%) and 85% specificity (95% CI, 80%-88%).Conclusions and RelevanceThe findings of this external diagnostic validation study suggest that both the O-RADS lexicon and the IOTA 2-step strategy can be used to stratify patients into risk groups. However, the observed malignancy rate in O-RADS 2 was not clearly below 1%.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7ec604049030e0252057ec0e954c00a8