| Literature DB >> 29392588 |
M Kerkhof1, I Ganeff2, R G J Wiggenraad3, G J Lycklama À Nijeholt4, S Hammer4, M J B Taphoorn2,5, L Dirven2,5, M J Vos2.
Abstract
To assess the applicability of perfusion-weighted (PWI) magnetic resonance (MR) imaging in clinical practice, as well as to evaluate the changes in PWI in brain metastases before and after stereotactic radiotherapy (SRT), and to correlate these changes to tumor status on conventional MR imaging. Serial MR images at baseline and at least 3 and 6 months after SRT were retrospectively evaluated. Size of metastases and the relative cerebral blood volume (rCBV), assessed with subjective visual inspection in the contrast enhanced area, were evaluated at each time point. Tumor behavior of metastases was categorized into four groups based on predefined changes on MRI during follow-up, or on histologically confirmed diagnosis; progressive disease (PD), pseudoprogression (PsPD), non-progressive disease (non-PD) and progression unspecified (PU). Twenty-six patients with 42 metastases were included. Fifteen percent (26/168) of all PW images could not be evaluated due to localization near large vessels or the scalp, presence of hemorrhage artefacts, and in 31% (52/168) due to unmeasurable residual metastases. The most common pattern (52%, 13/25 metastases) showed a high rCBV at baseline and low rCBV during follow-up, occurring in metastases with non-PD (23%, 3/13), PsPD (38%, 5/13) and PU (38%, 5/13). Including only metastases with a definite outcome generally showed low rCBV in PsPD or non-PD, and high rCBV in PD. Although non-PD and PsPD may be distinguished from PD after SRT using the PW images, the large proportion of images that could not be assessed due to artefacts and size severely hampers value of PWI in predicting tumor response after SRT.Entities:
Keywords: Brain metastases; Perfusion MR imaging; Stereotactic radiotherapy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29392588 PMCID: PMC5928168 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-018-2779-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
Patient characteristics
| Gender, n (%) | |
| Male | 12 (46) |
| Female | 14 (54) |
| Dosage SRT (Gy) | |
| Median | 21 |
| Range | 21–24 |
| Age (years) | |
| Median | 65 |
| Range | 40–84 |
| Primary tumor, n (%) | 26 |
| NSCLC | 12 (46) |
| Breast cancer | 5 (19) |
| Other | 9 (36) |
| Metastasis per primary tumor, n (%) | 42 |
| NSCLC | 20 (48) |
| Breast cancer | 9 (21) |
| Other | 13 (31) |
| Amount of metastases, n (%) | |
| 1 | 15 (58) |
| 2 | 6 (23) |
| 3 | 5 (19) |
| Metastasis location, n (%) | |
| Supra-tentorial | 36 (86) |
| Infra-tentorial | 6 (14) |
n number, NSCLC non-small cell lung carcinoma
Changes in the estimated area of contrast-enhancement on T1WI with gadolinium, compared to the previous time point
| Changes T1WI with gadolinium | 3 months FU (N = 42) (%) | 6 months FU (N = 42) (%) | 9 months FU (N = 25) (%) | 12 months FU (N = 16) (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Decrease | 33 (79) | 24 (57) | 9 (36) | 10 (63) |
| Increase | 9 (21) | 17 (41) | 14 (56) | 4 (25) |
| Stable | – | 1 (2) | 2 (8) | 1 (6) |
An increase is defined as ≥ 5% increase in the area of contrast-enhancement compared to previous time point and a decrease as ≥ 5% decrease in the area of contrast-enhancement compared to the previous time point
Fig. 1a PWI pattern analysis (N = 25) and b PWI subanalysis (N = 13) showing high or low rCBV at baseline and during follow-up. Numbers of metastases evaluated at each time point are added as well as the number of patients with PsPD, non-PD, PU and PD in case it is their last follow-up moment. Red colour high rCBV, blue colour low rCBV, PWI perfusion weighted image, FU follow-up, PsPD pseudoprogression, non-PD no progressive disease, PU progression unspecified (progressive disease or pseudoprogression), PD progressive disease