| Literature DB >> 26950220 |
Asta Kristine Håberg1,2, Tommy Arild Hammer2, Kjell Arne Kvistad2, Jana Rydland2, Tomm B Müller3, Live Eikenes4, Mari Gårseth5, Lars Jacob Stovner1,6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Evaluate types and prevalence of all, incidental, and clinically relevant incidental intracranial findings, i.e. those referred to primary physician or clinical specialist, in a cohort between 50 and 66 years from the Nord-Trøndelag Health (HUNT) study. Types of follow-up, outcome of repeated neuroimaging and neurosurgical treatment were assessed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26950220 PMCID: PMC4780781 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0151080
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow diagram and overview of inclusion and exclusion of participants in the HUNT MRI study, the types and prevalence of classes of intracranial findings, follow up and outcome in the included participants.
Scan parameters for the different sequences in HUNT MRI.
| MRI sequence | Matrix size | NSA | TR (ms) | TE (ms) | Flip-angle | Slice thickness (mm) | Gap (mm) | Overlap (mm) | FOV (mm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 192x192 | 1 | 10.2 | 4.1 | 10° | 1.2 | 0 | 0 | 240 | |
| 512x320 | 2 | 7840.0 | 95.3 | 90° | 4.0 | 1 | 0 | 230 | |
| 256x192 | 1 | 500.0 | 20.0 | 20° | 4.0 | 1 | 0 | 230 | |
| 256x224 | 1 | 11,002.0 | 122.9 | 90° | 4.0 | 1 | 0 | 230 | |
| 320x224 | 1 | 24.0 | 2.7 | 20° | 1.0 | 0 | 5.0 | 200 |
All imaging was performed on the same 1.5 T General Electric Signa HDx 1.5 T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanner equipped with an eight channel head coil and software version pre-14.0M4. IR-FSPGR, inversion recovery prepared fast spoiled grass; GRE, gradient echo; T2W, T2 weighted; T2*W, T2* weighted; FLAIR; fluid attenuated inversion recovery; ToF-angio, Time of flight angiography; NSA, number of signal averages; TR, repletion time; TE, Echo time; FOV, field of view.
Fig 2Examples of the different scan sequences and incidental intracranial findings in the HUNT MRI cohort, i.e. meningioma (T1W 3D), glioma (FLAIR), arteriovenous malformation (T2* weighted), arachnoidal cyst (T2W weighted), aneurysms (Time of Flight angio) and silent infarctions (T1W 3D scan).
Fig 3Typical examples of Fazekas grade 1, 2 and 3 white matter hyperintensities (WMH).
The examples are from the FLAIR scans of three HUNT MRI participants.
Fig 4Age and sex distribution in the HUNT MRI cohort.
Number and prevalence intracranial findings stratified into total number of findings, participants with findings, distribution of findings between men and women, total incidental findings, and number of individuals with incidental findings with clinical impact in the HUNT-MRI cohort of 1006 participants (476 men and 530 women).
| Type of Finding | Total number of each finding with (%) and [95% CI] | Number of individuals with each type of finding with (%) and [95% CI] | Total number of men: women with each type of finding | Total number of incidental findings with (%) and [95% CI] | Number of individuals with findings of clinical impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arachnoid cyst | 36 (3.6%) [2–5%] | 36 (3.6%) [2–5%] | 21:15 | 36 (3.6%) [2–5%] | 0 |
| Other cysts | 13 (1.3%) [1–2%] | 13 (1.3%) [1–2%] | 3:10 | 13 (1.3%) [1–2%] | 0 |
| Cerebral aneurysm | 23 (2.3%) [1–3%] | 19 (1.9%) [1–3%] | 5:14 | 23 (2.3%)[1–3%] | 19 (1.9%) [1–3%] |
| Cavernous hemangioma | 3 (0.3%) [0–1%] | 3 (0.3%) [0–1%] | 1:2 | 3 (0.3%) [0–1%] | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] |
| Deep venous anomaly | 4 (0.4%) [0–1%] | 4 (0.4%) [0–1%] | 2:2 | 4 (0.4%) [0–1%] | 0 |
| AV | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 0:1 | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] |
| Stenosis of middle cerebral artery | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 1:1 | 0 | 0 |
| Occlusion internal carotid | 5 (0.5%) [0–1%] | 5 (0.5%) [0–1%] | 3:2 | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] |
| Stenosis of internal carotid artery | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 0:1 | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] |
| Heterotopia | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 2:0 | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 0 |
| Chiari malformation gr. 1 | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 1:1 | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 0 |
| Megacisterna magna | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1 (0.1%)[0–0%] | 0:1 | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 0 |
| Septum pellucidum/cavum vergea | 7 (0.7%) [0–1%] | 7 (0.7%) [0–1%] | 5:2 | 7 (0.7%) [0–1%] | 0 |
| Cortical | 12 (1.2%) [0–2%] | 12 (1.2%) [0–2%] | 7:4 | 3 (0.3%) [0–0%] | 3 (0.3%) [0–0%] |
| Sub-cortical | 5 (0.5%) [0–1%] | 5 (0.5%) [0–1%] | 4:1 | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] |
| Lacunar | 27 (2.7%) [2–4%] | 19 (1.9%) [1–3%] | 11:8 | 22 (2.2%) [1–3%] | 14 (1.4%) [0–2%] |
| Cerebellar | 15 (1.5%) [1–2%] | 15 (1.5%) [1–2%] | 7:8 | 10 (1.0%) [0–2%] | 10 (1.0%) [0–2%] |
| 91 (9.1%) [7–10%] | 91 (9.1%) [7–10%] | 34:57 | 84 (8.4%) [6–10%] | 84 (8.4%) [6–10%] | |
| 41 (4.1%) [0–8%] | 13 (1.3%) [1–2%] | 6:7 | 41 (4.1%) [0–8%] | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | |
| 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 0:2 | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 0 | |
| Glioma | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 0:1 | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1(0.1%) [0–0%] |
| Meningioma | 10 (1.0%) [0–2%] | 10 (1.0%) [0–2%] | 1:9 | 10 (1.0%) [0–2%] | 10 (1.0%) [0–2%] |
| Pituitary tumors | 3 (0.3%) [0–1%] | 3 (0.3%) [0–1%] | 1:2 | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] | 2 (0.2%) [0–0%] |
| Vestibular schwannoma | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1:0 | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1(0.1%) [0–0%] |
| Contusions | 12 (1.1%) [0–2%] | 10 (0.9%) [0–1%] | 7:3 | 0 | 0 |
| Multiple sclerosis | 3 (0.3%) [0–1%] | 3 (0.3%) [0–1%] | 2:1 | 0 | 0 |
| Progressive supranuclear palsy | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1 (0.1%) [0–0%] | 1:0 | 0 | 0 |
| Postoperative changes | 5 (0.5%) [0–1%] | 5 (0.5%) [0–1%] | 2:3 | 0 | 0 |
| 329 (32.7%) [30–36%] | 287 (28.5%) [26–31%] | 109 (45.0%): 133 (55.0%) | 273 (27.1%) [24–30%] | 152 (15.1%) [13–17%] |
The findings are categorized based on their finale etiology as determined from HUNT MRI scans, previous medical records and radiological examinations, phone interview, and in some cases repeated neuroimaging. False positives are reported in Table 3.
# Incidental intracranial findings with clinical impact are those leading to referral to primary physician or clinical specialist. Participants referred to follow-up neuroimaging which did not confirm the initial diagnosis or fall into the other categories in this table are not included here, see Table 3 for this information.
1 Rathke’s cleft (n = 2), neuroepithelial subcortical (n = 1), ependymal (n = 9), and one pineal gland (n = 1) cysts.
2 AV, arteriovenous
3 Three participants had septum pellucidum and cavum vergae.
4 44 individuals had one or more strokes.
5 Excessive WMH were defined as score ≥ 2 on the modified Fazekas scale (see Methods and Fig 2 for details), excluding those with multiple sclerosis.
* Significant sex-specific difference in prevalence, p = 0.048, two-tailed
** Significant sex-specific difference in prevalence, p = 0.02, two-tailed
False and true positive intracranial findings and positive predictive value of initial MRI based on follow-up neuroimaging in participants in the HUNT MRI cohort with a suspected neurosurgical condition.
| Type of uncertain finding on initial MRI | Total number | Number of true positives with (%) | Number of false positives with (%) | Final classification of false positives |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cerebral aneurysm | 11 | 9 (81.2%) | 2 (18.2%) | Artifact (n = 1), Ectasia (n = 1) |
| Glioma | 13 | 1 (7.7%) | 12 (92.3%) | Gliosis/WMH (n = 6), Cyst (n = 2), Benign unspecific lesion |
| Meningioma | 10 | 10 (100%) | 0 (0%) | NA |
| Pituitary tumors | 2 | 2 (100%) | 0 (0%) | NA |
| Vestibular schwannoma | 1 | 1 (100%) | 0 (0%) | NA |
a Benign unspecified lesion; a lesion not possible to classify from its MRI characteristics, but considered benign based on ≥ 3 repeated imaging over 2 years. CI, confidence interval; WMH, white matter hyperintensities; NA, not applicable
*p<0.0001 two tailed