Literature DB >> 33381018

Can Tumor Location on Pre-treatment MRI Predict Likelihood of Pseudo-Progression vs. Tumor Recurrence in Glioblastoma?-A Feasibility Study.

Marwa Ismail1, Virginia Hill2,3, Volodymyr Statsevych2, Evan Mason2, Ramon Correa1, Prateek Prasanna4, Gagandeep Singh1, Kaustav Bera1,5, Rajat Thawani1, Manmeet Ahluwalia6, Anant Madabhushi1,7, Pallavi Tiwari1.   

Abstract

A significant challenge in Glioblastoma (GBM) management is identifying pseudo-progression (PsP), a benign radiation-induced effect, from tumor recurrence, on routine imaging following conventional treatment. Previous studies have linked tumor lobar presence and laterality to GBM outcomes, suggesting that disease etiology and progression in GBM may be impacted by tumor location. Hence, in this feasibility study, we seek to investigate the following question: Can tumor location on treatment-naïve MRI provide early cues regarding likelihood of a patient developing pseudo-progression vs. tumor recurrence? In this study, 74 pre-treatment Glioblastoma MRI scans with PsP (33) and tumor recurrence (41) were analyzed. First, enhancing lesion on Gd-T1w MRI and peri-lesional hyperintensities on T2w/FLAIR were segmented by experts and then registered to a brain atlas. Using patients from the two phenotypes, we construct two atlases by quantifying frequency of occurrence of enhancing lesion and peri-lesion hyperintensities, by averaging voxel intensities across the population. Analysis of differential involvement was then performed to compute voxel-wise significant differences (p-value < 0.05) across the atlases. Statistically significant clusters were finally mapped to a structural atlas to provide anatomic localization of their location. Our results demonstrate that patients with tumor recurrence showed prominence of their initial tumor in the parietal lobe, while patients with PsP showed a multi-focal distribution of the initial tumor in the frontal and temporal lobes, insula, and putamen. These preliminary results suggest that lateralization of pre-treatment lesions toward certain anatomical areas of the brain may allow to provide early cues regarding assessing likelihood of occurrence of pseudo-progression from tumor recurrence on MRI scans.
Copyright © 2020 Ismail, Hill, Statsevych, Mason, Correa, Prasanna, Singh, Bera, Thawani, Ahluwalia, Madabhushi and Tiwari.

Entities:  

Keywords:  ADIFFI; atlas; glioblastoma; pseudo-progression; tumor recurrence

Year:  2020        PMID: 33381018      PMCID: PMC7767991          DOI: 10.3389/fncom.2020.563439

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Front Comput Neurosci        ISSN: 1662-5188            Impact factor:   2.380


  32 in total

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10.  Differentiating Radiation-Induced Necrosis from Recurrent Brain Tumor Using MR Perfusion and Spectroscopy: A Meta-Analysis.

Authors:  Ming-Tsung Chuang; Yi-Sheng Liu; Yi-Shan Tsai; Ying-Chen Chen; Chien-Kuo Wang
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2016-01-07       Impact factor: 3.240

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