| Literature DB >> 27246722 |
Jacob P Hoogendam1, Irene M L Kalleveen2, Catalina S Arteaga de Castro2, Alexander J E Raaijmakers2, René H M Verheijen3, Maurice A A J van den Bosch2, Dennis W J Klomp2, Ronald P Zweemer3, Wouter B Veldhuis2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We studied the feasibility of high-resolution T2-weighted cervical cancer imaging on an ultra-high-field 7.0-T magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) system using an endorectal antenna of 4.7-mm thickness.Entities:
Keywords: Antenna; Feasibility studies; Magnetic resonance imaging; Neoplasm staging; Uterine cervical neoplasms
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27246722 PMCID: PMC5306309 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-016-4419-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 5.315
Fig. 1a Overview of the monopole antenna shown with the 14-Fr Foley urinary catheter (arrow) removed. b Transverse T2-weighted 7.0-T MRI of the inner female pelvis which demonstrates the close proximity of the endorectal monopole antenna (broad arrow) to this stage IB2 poorly differentiated papillary squamotransitional cell carcinoma (asterisk) of the cervix. Note the uterine fundus (F) and the T2 hypointense fibrostromal ring surrounding the tumour (narrow arrows) indicative of absent parametrial invasion
Baseline characteristics of the 20 women who underwent 7.0-T MRI
| Median age (range) | 39.3 (25.3–66.5) years |
| Median BMI (range) | 22.3 (18.4–36.7) kg/m2 |
|
| |
| Parity | |
| 0 | 9 (45 %) |
| 1 | 3 (15 %) |
| 2 | 8 (40 %) |
| WHO performance status | |
| 0 | 17 (85 %) |
| 1 | 3 (15 %) |
| ASA classification | |
| 1 | 13 (65 %) |
| 2 | 7 (35 %) |
| Stage | |
| IB1 | 9 (45 %) |
| IB2 | 4 (20 %) |
| IIA1 | 1 (5 %) |
| IIB | 6 (30 %) |
| Tumour histology | |
| Squamous cell carcinoma | 10 (50 %) |
| Adenocarcinoma | 8 (40 %) |
| Other | 2 (10 %) |
| Tumour differentiation | |
| Grade 1 | 3 (15 %) |
| Grade 2 | 8 (40 %) |
| Grade 3 | 7 (35 %) |
| Not applicable | 2 (10 %) |
| LVSI present | 5 (25 %) |
| Lymph node metastasesa | 4 (20 %) |
| Treatment | |
| Robot ass. laparoscopic SLN + PLND + RVT or RH | 7 (35 %) |
| Robot ass. laparoscopic SLN + PLND + RH + adjuvant Rthb | 1 (5 %) |
| Robot ass. laparoscopic SLN + PLND + chemoradiationc | 1 (5 %) |
| PLND + RH via laparotomyd | 1 (5 %) |
| Chemoradiation | 10 (50 %) |
BMI body mass index, WHO World Health Organisation, ASA American Society of Anaesthesiologists, LVSI lymphvascular space invasion, SLN sentinel lymph node procedure, PLND pelvic lymph node dissection, RVT radical vaginal trachelectomy, RH radical hysterectomy, Rth radiotherapy
aDetermined by a composite of the SLN procedure, PLND or PET-CT as available
bAdjuvant radiotherapy was indicated due to a <5-mm resection margin
cChemoradiation substituted radical hysterectomy because of intraoperatively detected tumour-positive sentinel lymph nodes
dAfter diagnosis and staging at our centre, this patient preferred treatment at a different hospital where no laparoscopic radical surgery was performed
Fig. 2a Mid-sagittal and b axial oblique (perpendicular to the cervical canal) T2-weighted slice at 7.0 T of a 44-year-old patient diagnosed with a 70-mm, stage IB2, poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma originating from the ventral part of the cervix. Note the visible biopsy site (arrow). c Slice from the same sequence, though 12 mm cranially, as b, depicting part of the healthy (T2 hypointense) cervix invaded by tumour. d Axial oblique T2-weighted slice from the clinical 1.5-T MRI, created 17 days earlier, matched to c for comparison. Note the T2 hypointense fibrostromal ring surrounding the tumour
Fig. 3a Sagittal and b axial oblique T2-weighted acquisitions from the 7.0-T MRI of a 48-year-old woman diagnosed with an 80-mm poorly differentiated squamous cell carcinoma of the dorsal cervix. c. Slice from the same acquisition as b, though positioned 12 mm cranially. Parametrial invasion was judged absent at rectovaginal palpation, leading to a clinical stage IB2. However, the unclear tumour demarcation and absent T2 hypointense fibrostromal ring on the right (arrows) are suggestive of right-sided parametrial invasion (i.e. stage IIB). d-f The matched T2-weighted axial oblique slices from the clinical 1.5-T MRI, created 24 days earlier, are provided for comparison
Fig. 4a Transverse T2-weighted acquisition from the 7.0-T MRI of a 65-year-old woman diagnosed with a 50-mm moderately differentiated squamous cell carcinoma of the cervix. b Slice from the same acquisition as a, though positioned 8 mm cranially. Only left-sided parametrial invasion was judged present at rectovaginal palpation, leading to a clinical stage IIB. However, the bilaterally unclear tumour demarcation and absent T2 hypointense fibrostromal ring are suggestive of bilaterally sided parametrial invasion (arrows). c, d The matched transverse T2-weighted slices from the clinical 1.5-T MRI, created 16 days earlier, are provided for comparison. Note the free fluid in the rectouterine pouch (Douglas)
Fig. 5Image artefacts that were encountered on 7.0-T MRI were a motion artefacts, b locally destructive B1 interference, c inversion bands due to too much B1 under the external transmit/receive antennae and d SENSE reconstruction artefacts. Note the unrelated vaginal tampon (asterisk) in c