Literature DB >> 33350761

Evaluation of perfusion MRI value for tumor progression assessment after glioma radiotherapy: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Longlong Wang1, Lizhou Wei2, Jingjian Wang1, Na Li1, Yanzhong Gao1, Hongge Ma1, Xinran Qu1, Ming Zhang3.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to evaluate the diagnostic performance of magnetic resonance perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI) as a noninvasive method to assess post-treatment radiation effect and tumor progression in patients with glioma.
METHODS: A systematic literature search was performed in the PubMed, Cochrane Library, and Embase databases up to March 2020. The quality of the included studies was assessed by the quality assessment of diagnostic accuracy studies 2. Data were extracted to calculate sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic odds ratio (DOR), 95% Confidence interval (CI) and analyze the heterogeneity of the studies (Spearman correlation coefficient, I2 test). We performed meta-regression and subgroup analyses to identify the impact of study heterogeneity.
RESULTS: Twenty studies were included, with available data for analysis on 939 patients and 968 lesions. All included studies used dynamic susceptibility contrast (DSC) PWI, four also used dynamic contrast-enhanced PWI, and three also used arterial spin marker imaging PWI. When DSC was considered, the pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.83 (95% CI, 0.79 to 0.86) and 0.83 (95% CI, 0.78 to 0.87), respectively; pooled DOR, 21.31 (95% CI, 13.07 to 34.73); area under the curve (AUC), 0.887; Q∗, 0.8176. In studies using dynamic contrast-enhanced, the pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.73 (95% CI, 0.66 to 0.80) and 0.80 (95% CI, 0.69 to 0.88), respectively; pooled DOR, 10.83 (95% CI, 2.01 to 58.43); AUC, 0.9416; Q∗, 0.8795. In studies using arterial spin labeling, the pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.79 (95% CI, 0.69 to 0.87) and 0.78 (95% CI, 0.67 to 0.87), respectively; pooled DOR, 15.63 (95% CI, 4.61 to 53.02); AUC, 0.8786; Q∗, 0.809.
CONCLUSIONS: Perfusion magnetic resonance imaging displays moderate overall accuracy in identifying post-treatment radiation effect and tumor progression in patients with glioma. Based on the current evidence, DSC-PWI is a relatively reliable option for assessing tumor progression after glioma radiotherapy.
Copyright © 2020 the Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33350761      PMCID: PMC7769293          DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000023766

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)        ISSN: 0025-7974            Impact factor:   1.817


Introduction

Radiation therapy is an important modality used to treat glioma patients. However, radiation injury in the brain parenchyma has become 1 of its major complications.[ Glioma post-treatment radiation effect (PTRE) and tumor progression tend to occur within 2 years after treatment. The blood-brain barrier can be damaged by the residual tumor or its recurrence, or the post-surgical radiotherapy.[ However, these appear similarly on conventional images from magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and computed tomography (CT) enhanced scans, presenting enhanced mass with irregular edema, space-occupying effect, and cystic necrosis.[ Moreover, the tumor and PTRE share similar clinical symptoms, such as progressive local neurological deficits and intracranial hypertension. However, the treatment and prognosis of the 2 are quite different.[ The PTRE is analogous to a positive treatment effect, and its incentive is to continue with the adjuvant temozolomide treatment given the patients with positive treatment effects. Tumor progression is a sign that the present treatment is not working, and should prompt treatment change that might have some benefits, or at least stop the toxicity from the futile treatment. Therefore, early differentiation between PTRE and tumor progression would benefit the selection of suitable treatments and improve glioma patients’ prognosis. Currently, identification is made by perfusion-weighted imaging (PWI), magnetic resonance spectroscopy, diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), and positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT). PWI is 1 of the most widely used clinical application methods, as it is convenient, accurate, and radiation-free. Functionally, PWI can be divided into three categories: dynamic magnetic contrast-enhanced PWI (DSC-PWI), dynamic contrast-enhanced PWI (DCE-PWI), and arterial spin labeling PWI (ASL-PWI). In a region of interest, DSC-PWI is usually used to evaluate vascular density, blood volume, and blood flow; ASL-PWI mainly investigates the blood flow; DCE-PWI mainly assesses vascular permeability. When the region of interest is related to glioma tumor progression, high perfusion is observed due to tumor cell proliferation. Findings also include high capillary density, an increased number of new capillaries, immature development of the blood vessel wall, and high vascular permeability. On the other hand, when radiation necrosis occurs in the region of interest, tissue capillary stenosis or occlusion presents a low perfusion state. Each of the three PWI methods has advantages and disadvantages. DSC- and DCE-PWI are more widely used in clinical practice because of their higher signal-to-noise ratio in image quality compared to ASL-PWI. However, various side effects might exist in their clinical application because contrast agents should be used. ASL-PWI has no such concern because no contrast agents are injected into the body. An increasing number of scholars recommend a combination of imaging methods to differentiate between the 2 lesions. Nevertheless, due to the economic cost, patient cooperation, and examination time constraints, an optimal PWI pattern, combined with other imaging methods, is needed in clinical practice. Currently, the selection of the PWI technique (DSC, DCE, or ASL) is based on empirical or individual published literature. A previous study[ found no difference in differentiating true glioma progression from pseudoprogression when using DSC-MRI. Yet, another meta-analysis[ has suggested that the relative cerebral volume (rCBV) derived from DSC is the most commonly used parameter. Furthermore, no controlled study evaluating DSC, DCE, and ASL had been performed. Hence, it is necessary to conduct a systematic study on PWI evaluation of glioma tumor progression after radiotherapy. In this study, the Cochrane system evaluation method was used to evaluate the value of perfusion MRI in the diagnosis of tumor progression after glioma radiotherapy. We compared the three PWI (DSC, DCE, and ASL) technologies and hypothesized that perfusion MRI has the potential to assess post-treatment radiation effects and tumor progression in patients with glioma.

Methods

Ethical statement

As this meta-analysis was performed based on published data, ethical approval was not required.

Literature search

The investigators performed a systematic Internet literature search in the Cochrane Library, PubMed, and Embase databases aiming to identify relevant articles published in English before March 2020. Key search terms were “PWI or perfusion-weighted imaging or MR perfusion imaging” and “brain neoplasms or glioma or gliomas or brain glioma” and “radiotherapy or PTRE or radiation injury or radionecrosis or pseudoprogression” and “sensitivity and specificity.” We further used Medical, Matrix Google, and other search engines to identify relevant literature on the Internet. The species was defined as “Humans.”

Inclusion and exclusion criteria

Inclusion criteria: study type: prospective cohort study and retrospective case-control studies with at least ten participants; objective: evaluate the value of PWI, using DSC-PWI, DCE-PWI, or ASL-PWI, for tumor progression diagnosis after glioma radiotherapy; participants: patients with glioma (single or multiple lesions) that were treated with radiotherapy. Regardless of whether the patients underwent surgical treatment or chemotherapy, they have undergone MRI examination within three months after radiotherapy with no clear diagnosis; statistical index: sensitivity, specificity, and accuracy of the evaluation, which could be calculated, using the original data, directly or indirectly; diagnostic gold standard: pathological evidence based on tissue samples obtained by surgery or biopsy, or progressive increase of the lesions based on clinical and imaging follow-up; blind evaluation. Exclusion criteria: literature not in English; non-original research; animal experiments and other basic researches; published as “review,” “letter,” “comments,” “editorial,” “case report,” or “guidelines;” studies without definitive radiotherapy.

Literature selection and data extraction

Literature was selected according to the inclusion and exclusion criteria; the full text was retrieved if it could not be readily determined whether a study is to be selected; disagreements about the selection were resolved through discussion. One person completed the data extraction and analysis under the guidance of professional experts. The investigator extracted from each study data that included information about the author, publication year, country, types of brain tumor, study design type (prospective or retrospective), number of participants and lesions, characteristics of the study population (age and sex), radiotherapy type and total dose, reference standard, follow-up time, blinding, equipment field strength, sequence of PWI, parameter of PWI, field strength, contrast agent, contrast injection rate, threshold of parameter, and results: true positive, false positive, true negative, and false negative results, sensitivity, and specificity In this study, the sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic odds ratio (DOR) were analyzed to assess the value of the PWI-related methods (DSC-, DCE-, and ASL-PWI) in differentiating glioma tumor progression from PTRE.

Estimation of quality

The quality of the included studies was evaluated using the quality assessment of diagnostic accuracy studies 2 (QUADAS-2) tool. It includes 4 domains, assessing patient selection, index test, reference standard, flow and timing; in addition, concerns regarding applicability were also assessed in the first three domains,[ as shown in Table 1. The studies quality assessment was done according to the responses (eg, yes, no, unclear; high risk, low risk, unclear; high concern, low concern, unclear) and based on the study design and the extracted patient data for the 4 domain questions.
Table 1

Quality assessment of diagnostic studies.

DomainSignalling questions
Patient selectionA. risk of Bias
Was a consecutive or random sample of patients enrolled? (Yes, no, unclear)
Was a case–control design avoided? (Yes, no, unclear)
Did the study avoid inappropriate exclusions? (Yes, no, unclear)
Could the selection of patients have introduced bias? (High risk, low risk, unclear)
B. Concerns regarding applicability
Are there concerns that the included patients and setting do not match the review question?((High concern, low concern, unclear)
Index TestA. Risk of bias
Were the index test results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the reference standard? (Yes, no, unclear)
If a threshold was used, was it pre-specified? (Yes, no, unclear)
Could the conduct or interpretation of the index test have introduced bias? (High risk, low risk, unclear)
B. Concerns regarding applicability
Are there concerns that the index test,its conduct,or interpretation differ from the review questiong? (High concern, low concern, unclear)
Reference standardA. Risk of bias
Is the reference standards likely to correctly classify the target condition? (Yes, no, unclear)
Were the reference standards results interpreted without knowledge of the results of the index tests? (Yes, no, unclear)
Could the reference standard,its conduct,or its interpretation have introduced bias? (High risk, low risk, unclear)
B. Concerns regarding applicability
Are there concerns that the target condition as defined by the reference standard does not match the question? (High concern, low concern, unclear)
Flow and timingA. Risk of bias
Was there an appropriate interval between index test and reference standard?
(Yes, no, unclear)
Did all patients receive the same reference standard? (Yes, no, unclear)
Were all patients included in the analysis? (Yes, no, unclear)
Could the patient flow have introduced bias? (High risk, low risk, unclear)
Quality assessment of diagnostic studies.

Diagnostic efficacy evaluation index

The indices, including true positive, false positive, true negative, and false negative results, and the sensitivity and specificity of each test, were calculated based on the original data reported in the studies. The pooled sensitivity, specificity, DOR, Q∗ index (point at which the sensitivity and specificity are equal) and their 95% confidence interval (CI) were also calculated by Meta-DiSc 1.4. The summary receiver operating curves of the three diagnostic tests were plotted.

Statistical analysis

Meta-DiSc 1.4[ was used to pool the sensitivity, specificity, and DOR, plot the summary receiver operating characteristic, analyze the heterogeneity of the studies (Spearman regression coefficient, inconsistency index I2, and Chi-square P test), performed meta-regression analysis, and subgroup analysis. P < .05 indicated that there was significant heterogeneity between studies. I2 was used to evaluate heterogeneity quantitatively. When I2 < 25%, the fixed-effects model was used; when 25% ≤ I2 ≤ 50%, the random-effects model was used; when I2 > 50%, we also used random-effects model and searched for the source of heterogeneity. Review Manager 5.3 software was used to generate the flow chart and funnel plot. QUADAS-2 was used to evaluate the method quality of the included studies. A funnel plot was drawn to judge whether there was publication bias. The graph presents a symmetric funnel shape when there is no bias, and deviates from the symmetric shape when publication bias is present.[

Results

Study selection

The search retrieved 315 relevant publications, from which 123 were excluded because they were duplicate publications or non-clinical or non-diagnostic studies; following the inclusion and exclusion criteria, 172 studies were excluded for noncompliance. Finally, this study included 20 studies[ with 939 patients and 968 lesions (Fig. 1).
Figure 1

Flow chart.

Flow chart.

Study characteristics

The 20 studies included 5 prospective studies[ and 15 retrospective studies.[ Tumor types included glioma (World Health Organization [WHO] grades II-IV), high-grade glioma, and glioblastoma. For a reference standard, 4 studies[ obtained pathological results, 6 studies[ used clinicoradiological diagnosis, and ten studies[ used histopathologic and clinicoradiological diagnosis. The 4 studies with pathological results[ performed no follow-up, while the follow-up interval in the other studies was 1–3 months, and most of the total follow-up time was longer than 6 months.[ The lesions with a progressive increase in size and associated clinical deterioration were categorized as tumor progression. Enhancing lesions that remained stable or decreased in size on follow-up MRI without any clinical deterioration were classified as PTRE. One study was not blind,[ in three studies,[ the blinding status was not clear, and in 16 studies,[ the physicians evaluating the images were blinded. Most of the studies had more than 2 image-reading physicians. All 20 studies included DSC-PWI, three studies[ used maximum rCBV as a parameter, and the others used normalized rCBV. The rCBV is normalized by the ratio of blood volume in the lesion to that in the contralateral normal brain tissue; four studies[ used DCE-PWI with volumetric transfer constant (K-trans). It is calculated by measuring the gadolinium-based contrast agent accumulation in the extravascular-extracellular space; three studies[ used ASL-PWI with relative cerebral blood flow as a parameter. In 2 studies,[ the MRI field strength was unclear. The others used 1.5 T or 3.0 T scanners. After reading the full texts, the basic information and diagnostic results were extracted. These are presented in Tables 2 and 3, and Fig. 2.
Table 2

Study and patient characteristics of included studies.

StudyNationStudy designTumor typeCases (M/F)LesionsAge (scope)Radiothery/ total doseReference standardFollow up (mo)Blind
Xintao Hu 2011[13]USAretrospectiveGBM3131UNUNClinicoradiological diagnosis (100%)Interval time2–3moUN
Ramon F 2009[14]USAretrospectiveGBM57 (33/24)5754.2 ± 10.2EBRTHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisInterval time2M/ total time>12moImage analyst
J.Cha 2014[15]South KorearetrospectiveGBM35 (18/17)3549 (24–70)UNHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisInterval time3M/ total time10–19moUN
Ho Sung Kim 2010[16]South KorearetrospectiveHigh-Grade39 (22/17)3948.2 (18–78)UNHistopathologyNOImage analyst
Doo-Sik Kong 2011[17]South KorearetrospectiveGBM595950 (25–74)UNHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisInterval time2M/ total time6–48 moImage analyst
L.S. Hu 2009[18]USAprospectiveHigh-Grade Glioma1340UNUNHistopathologyNOImage analyst
Tae-Hyung Kim 2017[19]South KorearetrospectiveHigh-Grade Glioma51 (30/21)5152.9 (25–72)RT or gamma knifeclinicoradiological diagnosisTotal time >6 moImage analyst
Achim Seeger 2013[20]GermanyretrospectiveHigh-Grade Glioma40 (24/16)4053.6 ± 13.6UNclinicoradiological diagnosisTotal time 6–15 moImage analyst
S. Wang 2016[21]UKretrospectiveGBM41 (27/14)4155.71 ± 11.8UNHistopathologyNOImage analyst
Yu-Lin Wang 2018[22]ChinaretrospectiveGliomasWHO grade (II-IV)69 (50/19)6941.6 (18–77)UN/ 40–60 GyHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisInterval time2–3 mo/ total time6–96 moImage analyst
Nisha Rani 2018[23]IndiaprospectiveGliomas WHO grade (II-IV)28 (18/10)2841.4 ± 15.03UN/ 54.0– 60.0 GyClinicoradiological diagnosisTotal time6–12 moImage analyst
A.J. Prager 2015[24]USAretrospectiveHigh-Grade Gliomas68 (51/17)6854.9 (22.6–79.4)partial brain RTHistopathologyNOImage analyst
Kambiz Nael 2018[25]USAretrospectiveGBM46 (28/18)4632-7859.4–60.0GyClinicoradiological diagnosisTotal time 9–13 moImage analyst
Nader Zakhari 2019[26]CanadaprospectiveHigh-Grade Gliomas66 (43/23)6854.1 (50.9–57.3)60.0GyHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisinterval time1–3 moImage analyst
Young Jun Choi 2013[27]South KorearetrospectiveGBM62 (37/25)6249.3 (22–79)60.0GyHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisInterval time2–3 moImage analyst
Heba M. Soliman 2018[28]EgyptprospectiveGliomas WHO grade (II-IV)20 (14/6)2049.5 (15–85)UNHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisTotal time 6–12 moImage analyst
Qian Xu 2017[29]ChinaretrospectiveGliomas WHO grade (II-IV)29 (17/12)2947 ± 11UNHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisInterval time3M/ total time>6 moImage analyst
Z. Qiao 2019[30]ChinaretrospectiveHigh-Grade Gliomas4242UN3D conformal radiation therapy or gamma knifeHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisInterval time>3 moNO
Eike Steidl 2019[31]GermanyprospectiveGBM16 (8/8)1658 (43–76)UNclinicoradiological diagnosisInterval time1.5 mo/ total time1.5–14 moImage analyst
Nabil Elshafeey 2019[32]USAretrospectiveGBM98 (67/31)98UNUNHistopathology + clinicoradiological diagnosisTotal time24 moUN
Table 3

MRI characteristics of the included studies.

StudySequenceParameterField strength (T)Contrast agentContrast injection rateThreshold
Xintao Hu 2011[13]DSC (SVM)normalized rCBVUNUNUNrCBV>1.14
Ramon F 2009[14]DSCnormalized rCBV1.5Gadopentetate 0.1 mmol/kg5ml/srCBV>1.75
J.Cha 2014[15]DSCnormalized rCBV3.0Gadopentetate 0.1 mmol/kgUNrCBV>1.8
Ho Sung Kim 2010[16]DSCmax rCBV3.0Gadopentetate 0.1 mmol/kg4mL/srCBVmax>2.6
Doo-Sik Kong 2011[17]DSCnormalized rCBV3.0Gadobutrol 0.1 mmol/kg4mL/srCBV>1.47
L.S. Hu 2009[18]DSCnormalized rCBV3.0Gadodiamide 0.15 mmol/kg3-5mL/srCBV>0.71
Tae-Hyung Kim 2017[19]DSCnormalized rCBV3.0Gadobutrol 0.1 mmol/kg4mL/srCBV>1.07
Achim Seeger 2013[20]DSC/DCEnormalized rCBV/K trans1.5Gadobutrol 0.1 mmol/kg3mL/srCBV>1.14 Ktrans>0.058
S. Wang 2016[21]DSCmax rCBV3.0Gadopentetate 0.07 mmol/kg5mL/srCBVmax>4.06
Yu-Lin Wang 2018[22]DSC/ASLnormalized rCBV/rCBF3.0Gadolinium 0.1 mmol/kg4mL/srCBV>2.86 rCBF>1.86
Nisha Rani 2018[23]DSCnormalized rCBV1.5 or 3.0Gadopentetate 0.1 5mmol/kg3-5mL/srCBV>2.12
A.J. Prager 2015[24]DSCnormalized rCBV1.5 or 3.0Gadopentetate 0.07mmol/kg5mL/srCBV>1.27
Kambiz Nael 2018[25]DSC/DCEnormalized rCBV/K-trans1.5 or 3.0Gadopentetate 0.15mmol/kg5mL/srCBV>2.2 K-trans(min−1) >0.1
Nader Zakhari 2019[26]DSC/DCEnormalized rCBV/K-trans3.0UNUNrCBV>2.74 K-trans(min−1) >0.07
Young Jun Choi 2013[27]DSC/ASLnormalized rCBV/rCBF3.0Gadopentetate 0.1 mmol/kg4mL/sUN/UN
Heba M. Soliman 2018[28]DSCnormalized rCBV1.5Dotarem 0.1 mmol/kgUNrCBV>1.8
Qian Xu 2017[29]DSC/ASLnormalized rCBV/rCBF3.0Gadopentetate 0.2 mmol/kg3mL/srCBV>3.64 rCBF<1.11
Z. Qiao 2019[30]DSCnormalized rCBVUNUNUNrCBV>1.83
Eike Steidl 2019[31]DSCmax rCBV3.0Gadovist 0.1 mmol/kg4mL/srCBV>2.75
Nabil Elshafeey 2019[32]DSC/DCE (SVM)normalized rCBV/K-trans3.0UNUNSVM models
Figure 2

Diagnostic results.

Study and patient characteristics of included studies. MRI characteristics of the included studies. Diagnostic results.

Quality assessment

The quality of the included studies[ is shown in Fig. 3. The graphical display of QUADAS-2 results shows a low risk of bias and high applicability. Each domain is presented as percentages across the included studies shown in Fig. 3.
Figure 3

The quality of included studies.

The quality of included studies.

Meta analysis results

When assessed for the ability to differentiate tumor progression from PTRE, the DSC-PWI group's pooled sensitivity and specificity with their corresponding 95% confidence intervals (CI) were 0.83 (95% CI, 0.79 to 0.86) and 0.83 (95% CI, 0.78 to 0.87), respectively. The pooled DOR for this group was 21.31 (95% CI, 13.07 to 34.73), area under the curve (AUC) = 0.8870, and Q∗ = 0.8176, as shown in Fig. 4a-d. The DCE-PWI group's pooled sensitivity and specificity with corresponding 95% CI were 0.73 (95% CI, 0.66 to 0.80) and 0.80 (95% CI, 0.69 to 0.88), respectively. The pooled DOR for this group was 10.83 (95% CI, 2.01 to 58.43), AUC = 0.9416, and Q∗ = 0.8795, as Fig. 5a-d. The ASL-PWI group's pooled sensitivity and specificity with corresponding 95% CI were 0.79 (95% CI, 0.69 to 0.87) and 0.78 (95% CI, 0.67 to 0.87), respectively. The pooled DOR for this group was 15.63 (95% CI, 4.61 to 53.02), AUC = 0.8786, and Q∗ = 0.8090, as shown in Fig. 6a-d. Of these, the DSC group had the highest sensitivity and specificity.
Figure 4

Meta analysis results-DSC group.

Figure 5

Meta analysis results-DCE group.

Figure 6

Meta analysis results-ASL group.

Meta analysis results-DSC group. Meta analysis results-DCE group. Meta analysis results-ASL group.

Heterogeneity evaluation and publication bias

The heterogeneity test for pooled sensitivities and specificities in the DSC group showed I2 = 42.6% (P = .023) and I2 = 55.4% (P = .002), respectively (Fig. 4A-B). As there was medium and obvious heterogeneity, respectively, the random-effects model was used. The pooled DOR showed moderate heterogeneity (I2 = 29.1%, P = .110; Fig. 4c), so a random-effects model was used. The Spearman correlation coefficient was -0.15 (P = .527), indicating no threshold effect. The funnel plot showed a concentrated distribution of the points with a roughly symmetrical funnel shape, indicating the absence of apparent publication bias (Fig. 7). For the DCE group, there was significant heterogeneity for sensitivity (I2 = 89.8%, P = .000), and DOR (I2 = 81.9%, P = .001), no significant heterogeneity for specificity (I2 = 31.6%, P = .222). For the ASL group, significant heterogeneity was noted for sensitivity (I2 = 80.2%, P = . 006), and specificity (I2 = 71.3%, P = .031), no significant heterogeneity for DOR (I2 = 41.9%, P = .179) (Fig. 5A-C and Fig. 6A-C). Threshold effect and publication bias could not be assessed because there were so few studies in DCE and ASL groups. Consequently, the random-effects model was used to analyze the pooled sensitivities and specificities in these groups.
Figure 7

Funnel plot.

Funnel plot.

Meta regression analysis

A single-factor meta-regression analysis was used in search of the possible heterogeneity influencing factors, such as study design, tumor type, reference standard, field strength, and parameter of PWI. Finally, we found that the field strength and tumor type were the heterogeneity-causing factors (Table 4).
Table 4

Meta regression.

Meta regression.

Subgroup analysis

Subgroup analyses were performed to clarify the specific impact of some factors on the heterogeneity of the research results.[ Three studies[ used a field strength of 1.5 T, and their pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.821 and 0.769, respectively. Twelve studies [ used 3.0 T scanners; their pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.823 and 0.825, respectively. Three studies[ used 1.5 T and 3.0 T scanners; their pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.855 and 0.844, respectively. In 2 studies,[ it was not clear what was the field strength used. Their pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.813 and 0.920, respectively. For tumor type, nine studies reported on GBM,[ and their pooled sensitivity and specificity were 0.832 and 0.820, respectively. High-grade glioma was reported in 7 studies,[ with pooled sensitivity and specificity of 0.850 and 0.798, respectively. Gliomas of World Health Organization grades II-IV[ were analyzed in 4 studies[ with pooled sensitivity and specificity of 0.753 and 0.902, respectively.

Discussion

Postoperative radiotherapy, alone or in combination with chemotherapy, can significantly improve glioma patients’ prognosis. At present, it is the standard therapeutic regimen, but in the course of radiotherapy, acute, sub-acute, and chronic radiation, brain injury often occurs, and is easily confused with tumor progression.[ The differentiation of tumor progression from PTRE is mainly based on biopsy. However, patients rarely undergo histological examination after surgery. Moreover, biopsy specimens do not represent all lesions. Therefore, a clinicoradiological diagnosis is used in clinical practice to judge whether there is tumor progression or PTRE.[ A variety of functional imaging methods, such as PET-CT, DWI, Magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and PWI, are used to evaluate glioma after radiotherapy.[ However, PET-CT requires cyclotron, DWI can be affected by complex pathological tissue, and MRS has a high operator dependency. Consequently, PWI is 1 of the main imaging evaluation methods in clinical application, but there is no clear systematic study or clinical guideline for selecting between DSC, DCE, and ASL. Therefore, physicians choose based on their own experience. We collected for this study prospective and retrospective reports on PWI, aiming to evaluate gliomas after radiotherapy and perform statistical analysis. The results show that all 3 methods (DSC, DCE, and ASL) had high pooled sensitivity and specificity. The DSC was the most advantageous, with pooled sensitivity and specificity of 0.83 and pooled DOR of 21.31. These findings indicate that rCBV, derived from DSC evaluation of gliomas after radiotherapy, is advantageous, leading to improved sensitivity, specificity, and diagnostic accuracy. For this reason, DSC-PWI is a relatively reliable option for assessing tumor progression after gliomas radiotherapy. Still, this research has some limitations due to the retrospective case-control studies were included and statistical analysis. However, similar to our results, a meta-analysis[ reported that perfusion MRI (DSC-PWI) could improve the diagnostic accuracy in glioma treatment response assessment. Other studies did not compare the 3 PWI technologies for glioma tumor progression evaluation after radiotherapy. Other research had recommended multiple parameters, but we found that rCBV, a single parameter acquired for DSC-PWI, is a reliable and economical option. In the age of radiomics and machine learning, combining the findings from this study and other image analysis techniques could possibly lead to a more accurate differentiation. There was general heterogeneity between the included studies for the DSC group. We first eliminated the possibility of a threshold effect through the Spearman correlation coefficient. Meta-regression and subgroup analyses were used to assess the main factors influencing heterogeneity. After subgroup analysis for field strength, we found no apparent differences in sensitivity. At 0.920, the specificity of the unclear field strength group was significantly higher than the others. We found that in 1 of the studies,[ the unclear field strength applied supports vector machine technology that could increase the diagnostic accuracy. After subgroup analysis for the tumor type, the sensitivities of the GBM and high-grade gliomas groups were significantly higher than that of the gliomas grade II-IV group, at 0.83, 0.85, and 0.75, respectively. However, the gliomas grade II-IV group had a good specificity of 0.90. A recent meta-analysis[ showed that DSC-PWI demonstrated relatively good accuracy in separating viable tumors from treatment-related changes when evaluating high-grade gliomas, with a sensitivity of 0.90, higher than our results. There seems to be lower vascular density in grade II gliomas, which can decrease the rCBV. However, GBM and high-grade gliomas constituted the majority of our study. We acknowledge some limitations of this systematic review and meta-analysis. First, we used QUADAS-2 to evaluate the methodological quality of the included studies. Fifteen case-control studies[ were included to obtain more effective data, which might lead to selection and performance bias. Second, the DCE and ASL groups included only 4 and 3 studies, respectively; consequently, heterogeneity analysis was not performed. Third, the diagnostic reference standard was not unified; only 4 studies[ obtained all the pathological results, while the others relied on clinicoradiological or combined histopathological and clinicoradiological diagnosis. For all the pathological results, we expect a perfect brain biopsy for brain tumor diagnosis, but there is a possibility that the needle did not penetrate the tumor during biopsy. Four studies[ had unclear total follow-up time; thus, there is a risk of short follow-up. Fourth, 3 studies[ of the DSC group used maximum rCBV as a parameter. The meta-regression analysis indicated that the reference standard and parameter of PWI were not the main factors influencing the heterogeneity. Two studies[ used support vector machine models; there were also different contrast medium injection rates and thresholds. Fifth, only 1 study[ explicitly excluded nontemozolomide chemotherapy, as a result, nontemozolomide chemotherapy application is unclear. all of which may have impacted the heterogeneity of the included studies. Therefore, we suggest that large-scale, quality-controlled studies should be conducted in the future, especially for comparing DCE with ASL-PWI.

Conclusion

As a non-invasive method, perfusion MRI displayed moderate overall accuracy in differentiating PTRE from tumor progression in glioma patients treated with radiotherapy. More studies were supporting the high sensitivity and specificity of DSC-PWI. DSC-PWI is a relatively reliable option for assessing tumor progression after glioma radiotherapy. Although there was moderate accuracy for DCE and ASL-PWI, more high-quality clinical controlled studies are needed to further clarify this result.

Acknowledgments

We would like to thank Editage (www.editage.com) for English language editing.

Author contributions

Conceptualization: Longlong Wang, Lizhou Wei. Data curation: Lizhou Wei. Formal analysis: Longlong Wang. Investigation: Longlong Wang. Methodology: Lizhou Wei. Project administration: Jingjian Wang. Resources: Na Li. Software: Longlong Wang, Lizhou Wei. Supervision: Jingjian Wang, Yanzhong Gao. Validation: Na Li, Yanzhong Gao. Writing – original draft: Hongge Ma, Xinran Qu. Writing – review & editing: Longlong Wang, Ming Zhang.
  38 in total

1.  Asymmetric funnel plots and publication bias in meta-analyses of diagnostic accuracy.

Authors:  Fujian Song; Khalid S Khan; Jacqueline Dinnes; Alex J Sutton
Journal:  Int J Epidemiol       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 7.196

2.  Comparison of three different MR perfusion techniques and MR spectroscopy for multiparametric assessment in distinguishing recurrent high-grade gliomas from stable disease.

Authors:  Achim Seeger; Christian Braun; Marco Skardelly; Frank Paulsen; Jens Schittenhelm; Ulrike Ernemann; Sotirios Bisdas
Journal:  Acad Radiol       Date:  2013-12       Impact factor: 3.173

Review 3.  MR perfusion-weighted imaging in the evaluation of high-grade gliomas after treatment: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Praneil Patel; Hediyeh Baradaran; Diana Delgado; Gulce Askin; Paul Christos; Apostolos John Tsiouris; Ajay Gupta
Journal:  Neuro Oncol       Date:  2016-08-08       Impact factor: 12.300

Review 4.  Multiparametric MRI as a potential surrogate endpoint for decision-making in early treatment response following concurrent chemoradiotherapy in patients with newly diagnosed glioblastoma: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

Authors:  Chong Hyun Suh; Ho Sung Kim; Seung Chai Jung; Choong Gon Choi; Sang Joon Kim
Journal:  Eur Radiol       Date:  2018-01-26       Impact factor: 5.315

5.  Diffusion and perfusion MRI to differentiate treatment-related changes including pseudoprogression from recurrent tumors in high-grade gliomas with histopathologic evidence.

Authors:  A J Prager; N Martinez; K Beal; A Omuro; Z Zhang; R J Young
Journal:  AJNR Am J Neuroradiol       Date:  2015-01-15       Impact factor: 3.825

6.  Radiological diagnosis of brain radiation necrosis after cranial irradiation for brain tumor: a systematic review.

Authors:  Motomasa Furuse; Naosuke Nonoguchi; Kei Yamada; Tohru Shiga; Jean-Damien Combes; Naokado Ikeda; Shinji Kawabata; Toshihiko Kuroiwa; Shin-Ichi Miyatake
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2019-02-06       Impact factor: 3.481

7.  Treatment-related brain tumor imaging changes: So-called "pseudoprogression" vs. tumor progression: Review and future research opportunities.

Authors:  Diem Kieu Thi Tran; Randy L Jensen
Journal:  Surg Neurol Int       Date:  2013-04-17

8.  Longitudinal, leakage corrected and uncorrected rCBV during the first-line treatment of glioblastoma: a prospective study.

Authors:  Eike Steidl; Mathias Müller; Andreas Müller; Ulrich Herrlinger; Elke Hattingen
Journal:  J Neurooncol       Date:  2019-07-18       Impact factor: 4.130

Review 9.  The diagnosis and treatment of pseudoprogression, radiation necrosis and brain tumor recurrence.

Authors:  Kashif Parvez; Aatif Parvez; Gelareh Zadeh
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2014-07-03       Impact factor: 5.923

10.  Tumor recurrence versus treatment effects in glioma: A comparative study of three dimensional pseudo-continuous arterial spin labeling and dynamic susceptibility contrast imaging.

Authors:  Qian Xu; Qi Liu; Haitao Ge; Xinting Ge; Jiangfen Wu; Jianxun Qu; Kai Xu
Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 1.817

View more
  7 in total

Review 1.  High-Grade Glioma Treatment Response Monitoring Biomarkers: A Position Statement on the Evidence Supporting the Use of Advanced MRI Techniques in the Clinic, and the Latest Bench-to-Bedside Developments. Part 1: Perfusion and Diffusion Techniques.

Authors:  Otto M Henriksen; María Del Mar Álvarez-Torres; Patricia Figueiredo; Gilbert Hangel; Vera C Keil; Ruben E Nechifor; Frank Riemer; Kathleen M Schmainda; Esther A H Warnert; Evita C Wiegers; Thomas C Booth
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-03-03       Impact factor: 5.738

Review 2.  MRI biomarkers in neuro-oncology.

Authors:  Marion Smits
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurol       Date:  2021-06-20       Impact factor: 42.937

Review 3.  Advanced Imaging and Computational Techniques for the Diagnostic and Prognostic Assessment of Malignant Gliomas.

Authors:  Jayapalli Rajiv Bapuraj; Nicholas Wang; Ashok Srinivasan; Arvind Rao
Journal:  Cancer J       Date:  2021 Sep-Oct 01       Impact factor: 3.360

Review 4.  Hemodynamic Imaging in Cerebral Diffuse Glioma-Part B: Molecular Correlates, Treatment Effect Monitoring, Prognosis, and Future Directions.

Authors:  Vittorio Stumpo; Lelio Guida; Jacopo Bellomo; Christiaan Hendrik Bas Van Niftrik; Martina Sebök; Moncef Berhouma; Andrea Bink; Michael Weller; Zsolt Kulcsar; Luca Regli; Jorn Fierstra
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-05       Impact factor: 6.639

Review 5.  High-Grade Glioma Treatment Response Monitoring Biomarkers: A Position Statement on the Evidence Supporting the Use of Advanced MRI Techniques in the Clinic, and the Latest Bench-to-Bedside Developments. Part 2: Spectroscopy, Chemical Exchange Saturation, Multiparametric Imaging, and Radiomics.

Authors:  Thomas C Booth; Evita C Wiegers; Esther A H Warnert; Kathleen M Schmainda; Frank Riemer; Ruben E Nechifor; Vera C Keil; Gilbert Hangel; Patrícia Figueiredo; Maria Del Mar Álvarez-Torres; Otto M Henriksen
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2022-02-28       Impact factor: 5.738

6.  Perfusion magnetic resonance imaging in the differentiation between glioma recurrence and pseudoprogression: a systematic review, meta-analysis and meta-regression.

Authors:  Jun Zhang; Yulin Wang; Yan Wang; Huafeng Xiao; Xinjing Chen; Yifei Lei; Zhebin Feng; Xiaodong Ma; Lin Ma
Journal:  Quant Imaging Med Surg       Date:  2022-10

Review 7.  Hemodynamic Imaging in Cerebral Diffuse Glioma-Part A: Concept, Differential Diagnosis and Tumor Grading.

Authors:  Lelio Guida; Vittorio Stumpo; Jacopo Bellomo; Christiaan Hendrik Bas van Niftrik; Martina Sebök; Moncef Berhouma; Andrea Bink; Michael Weller; Zsolt Kulcsar; Luca Regli; Jorn Fierstra
Journal:  Cancers (Basel)       Date:  2022-03-10       Impact factor: 6.639

  7 in total

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