AI Improves Agreement and Reduces Time for Quantifying Metabolic Tumour Burden in Hodgkin Lymphoma †
Journal article, 2025

Background: The aim was to evaluate whether an artificial intelligence (AI)-based tool for the automated quantification of the total metabolic tumour volume (tMTV) in patients with Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) could support nuclear medicine specialists in lesion segmentation and thereby enhance inter-observer agreement. Methods: Forty-eight consecutive patients who underwent staging with [18F]FDG PET/CT were included. Eight invited specialists from different hospitals were asked to manually segment lesions for tMTV calculations in 12 cases without AI advice, and to use automated AI segmentation in a further 12 cases, with editing as required, i.e., segmenting/adjusting 24 cases each. Each case was segmented by two specialists manually and by two different specialists using the AI tool, allowing for the pairwise comparison of inter-observer variability. Results: The median difference between two specialists performing manual tMTV segmentations was 26 cm3 (IQR 10–86 cm3) corresponding to 23% (IQR 7–50%) of the median tMTV in the dataset, while the median difference between two specialists tMTV adjustments using AI segmentations was 12 cm3 (IQR 4–39 cm3) corresponding to 9% (IQR 2–21%) (p = 0.023). The median difference in tMTV between measurements with and without AI was 3.3 cm3, corresponding to 2.3% of the median tMTV. Conclusions: An automated AI-based tool can significantly increase agreement among specialists quantifying tMTV in HL patients staged with [18F]FDG PET/CT, without markedly changing the measurements.

artificial intelligence

Hodgkin disease

Fluorodeoxyglucose F18

observer variation

total metabolic tumour volume

Author

M. Sadik

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Sally F. Barrington

King's College London

Johannes Ulén

Eigenvision AB

Babak Saboury

National Institutes of Health (NIH)

Olof Enqvist

Eigenvision AB

Chalmers, Electrical Engineering, Signal Processing and Biomedical Engineering

Elin Trägårdh

Skåne University Hospital

Anne Lerberg Nielsen

Odense University Hospital

Annika Loft

Rigshospitalet

Jose Luis Loaiza Gongora

Akershus University Hospital

Jesús López-Urdaneta

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Rajender Kumar

Post Graduate Institute of Medical Education and Research

Martijn van Essen

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

L. Edenbrandt

Sahlgrenska University Hospital

Hematology Reports

2038-8322 (ISSN) 2038-8330 (eISSN)

Vol. 17 6 60

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Radiology and Medical Imaging

Surgery

DOI

10.3390/hematolrep17060060

PubMed

41283236

More information

Latest update

1/8/2026 4