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RECIST 1.1 and lesion selection: How to deal with ambiguity at baseline?
by
Liu, Yan
, Bertrand, Anne-Sophie
, Iannessi Antoine
, Beaumont, Hubert
in
Clinical trials
/ Evaluation
/ Ground truth
/ Impact analysis
/ Lesions
/ Tumors
2021
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Do you wish to request the book?
RECIST 1.1 and lesion selection: How to deal with ambiguity at baseline?
by
Liu, Yan
, Bertrand, Anne-Sophie
, Iannessi Antoine
, Beaumont, Hubert
in
Clinical trials
/ Evaluation
/ Ground truth
/ Impact analysis
/ Lesions
/ Tumors
2021
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RECIST 1.1 and lesion selection: How to deal with ambiguity at baseline?
Journal Article
RECIST 1.1 and lesion selection: How to deal with ambiguity at baseline?
2021
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Overview
Response Evaluation Criteria In Solid Tumors (RECIST) is still the predominant criteria base for assessing tumor burden in oncology clinical trials. Despite several improvements that followed its first publication, RECIST continues to allow readers a lot of freedom in their evaluations. Notably in the selection of tumors at baseline. This subjectivity is the source of many suboptimal evaluations. When starting a baseline analysis, radiologists cannot always identify tumor malignancy with any certainty. Also, with RECIST, some findings can be deemed equivocal by radiologists with no confirmatory ground truth to rely on. In the specific case of Blinded Independent Central Review clinical trials with double reads using RECIST, the selection of equivocal tumors can have two major consequences: inter-reader variability and modified sensitivity of the therapeutic response. Apart from the main causes leading to the selection of an equivocal lesion, due to the uncertainty of the radiological characteristics or due to the censoring of on-site evaluations, several other situations can be described more precisely. These latter involve cases where an equivocal is selected as target or non-target lesions, the management of equivocal lymph nodes and the case of few target lesions. In all cases, awareness of the impact of selecting a non-malignant lesion will lead radiologists to make selections in the most rational way. Also, in clinical trials where the primary endpoint differs between phase 2 (response-related) and phase 3 (progression-related) trials, our impact analysis will help them to devise strategies for the management of equivocal lesions.
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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