| Literature DB >> 28797254 |
Michael Wahl1, Mekhail Anwar1, Christopher P Hess2,3, Susan M Chang4, Janine M Lupo5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cranial irradiation is associated with long-term cognitive changes. Cerebral microbleeds (CMBs) have been identified on susceptibility-weighted MRI (SWI) in patients who have received prior cranial radiation, and serve as radiographic markers for microvascular injury thought to contribute to late cognitive decline. The relationship between CMB formation and radiation dose has not previously been quantified.Entities:
Keywords: Glioma; Microbleeds; Radiation therapy; Susceptibility-weighted imaging; Treatment effects
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28797254 PMCID: PMC5553662 DOI: 10.1186/s13014-017-0861-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiat Oncol ISSN: 1748-717X Impact factor: 3.481
Fig. 1Example Microbleeds. (a) and (b) demonstrate example patients with SWI images obtained at early (left) and late (right) timepoints, demonstrating progression in the number and distribution of CMBs between scans
Summary of total CMB counts and densities across all subjects by anatomic and dosimetric region. For lobar regions, density calculations are normalized to the volume of each lobe receiving at least 30 Gy (MDV30). Units of CMB density are given in CMBs/dm3
| 1-2 Years | 3-4 Years | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Region | Total CMB Count | Median CMB Density (range) | Total CMB Count | Median CMB Density (range) |
| Whole Brain | 66 | 4.43 (0.68 – 12.4) | 240 | 23.0 (15.5 - 47.4) |
| <30 Gy | 2 | 0 (0–1.48) | 35 | 6.41 (2.48 – 14.6) |
| 30-45 Gy | 8 | 5.7 (0 – 14.1) | 52 | 32.9 (28.9 – 74.7) |
| >45 Gy | 56 | 9.51 (0 – 27.0) | 154 | 47.6 (24.8 – 97.6) |
| Frontal Lobe | 6 | 0 (0–6.30) | 50 | 29.1 (0.0 – 70.3) |
| Parietal Lobe | 19 | 8.27 (0–45.9) | 58 | 75.3 (26.9 – 135) |
| Occipital Lobe | 6 | 0 (0 – 38.1) | 35 | 37.9 (0 – 97.8) |
| Temporal Lobe | 9 | 5.10 (0 – 30.7) | 26 | 67.1 (0 – 318) |
| Periventricular White Matter | 26 | 7.7 (0–30.2) | 71 | 53.9 (0 – 152) |
Fig. 2Distribution of microbleeds by dose. a, b) Histogram of microbleeds vs dose at the early (<3 years) and late (≥3 years) timepoints, respectively. c) Cumulative distribution function of microbleed formation by dose for early (solid) and late (dashed) timepoints. The distribution between the two timepoints was significantly different by a Kolmogorov-Smirnov test (p = 0.006)
Fig. 3CMB density by dose. Boxplot of CMB densities for each subject in low, medium and high-dose regions at early (a) and late (b) timepoints. Significant differences between dose regions by Wilcoxon rank-sum tests are shown; *p < 0.05. **p < 0.01